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BEN AFFLECK QUESTIONS AI HYPE IN HOLLYWOOD AND FINANCE

Techlife News

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Techlife News #743

Ben Affleck is adding his voice to a growing group of public figures pushing back against the more exuberant claims surrounding artificial intelligence.

BEN AFFLECK QUESTIONS AI HYPE IN HOLLYWOOD AND FINANCE

The actor and filmmaker recently expressed skepticism about large language models, arguing that while Al tools may be useful, they lack genuine creativity and are being oversold to justify massive corporate investments. His remarks have resonated beyond the entertainment industry, drawing support from prominent investors who are also questioning the sustainability of today’s Al boom.

Affleck’s comments arrived at a moment when artificial intelligence dominates conversations across film, technology, and financial markets. Studios are experimenting with Al-assisted workflows, while tech companies are pouring tens of billions of dollars into chips, data centers, and model training. Against that backdrop, Affleck framed Al less as a creative revolution and more as a productivity tool whose limitations are often glossed over.

COMMENTS MADE ON THE JOE ROGAN EXPERIENCE

Affleck shared his views during an appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience, where discussions frequently drift into technology, culture, and economics. He criticized the reliability of outputs generated by large language models, saying they often produce confident-sounding but flawed results. In his view, these shortcomings make Al unsuitable as a true creative partner.

Affleck argued that much of the rhetoric surrounding artificial intelligence comes from executives and investors seeking to rationalize soaring valuations. He suggested that claims about Al replacing human creativity are exaggerated, noting that recent generations of models have delivered incremental improvements while requiring dramatically more electricity, data, and computing resources.

His skepticism is shaped by firsthand experience in filmmaking, an industry where creativity, emotional nuance, and human judgment remain central. While Al can assist with technical tasks, Affleck indicated that storytelling still depends on human insight rather than probabilistic text generation.

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