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Ethics in Motion: Who Owns AI Cinema?
(5 - 23)



What You’ll Explore
Authorship: Who is the creator when AI assists the process?
Ownership: Copyright, credit, and the shifting landscape of rights.
Bias in AI: How datasets influence the stories and images we produce.
Representation: Whose voices are amplified, and whose are left out?

Format
Duration: Half-day seminar (4 hours).
Structure:
Short talks introducing key ethical frameworks
Group dialogue and case studies (e.g., controversial AI artworks)
Guided creative exercise: making short “critical films” or visual essays using AI tools
Roundtable screenings and discussion
Output: Participants create a reflective piece (film, image sequence, or essay-video) that interrogates AI’s social impact.
Who It’s For
Artists and filmmakers curious about AI’s implications
Students and researchers in media, art history, or cultural studies
Creators who want to pair practice with critical reflection
What You’ll Explore
Authorship: Who is the creator when AI assists the process?
Ownership: Copyright, credit, and the shifting landscape of rights.
Bias in AI: How datasets influence the stories and images we produce.
Representation: Whose voices are amplified, and whose are left out?

Format
Duration: Half-day seminar (4 hours).
Structure:
Short talks introducing key ethical frameworks
Group dialogue and case studies (e.g., controversial AI artworks)
Guided creative exercise: making short “critical films” or visual essays using AI tools
Roundtable screenings and discussion
Output: Participants create a reflective piece (film, image sequence, or essay-video) that interrogates AI’s social impact.
Who It’s For
Artists and filmmakers curious about AI’s implications
Students and researchers in media, art history, or cultural studies
Creators who want to pair practice with critical reflection