Honestly, I'm surprised the actors even went to the convention. Just being there without talking about struck work seems like threading a needle. That seems like violating the spirit of the rule while staying within the letter. They probably shouldn't have talked about it at all, even elliptically.
It seemed like walking a tightrope to me too.
Another way they dodged the spirit of the agreement was by asking someone in the audience to say a the name of a show or character that actors were forbidden to say.
It was far from a perfect solution, but I’m glad they didn’t cancel it altogether, and I hope the mere mention of the shows doesn’t keep them from coming to an agreement.
If he wanted to violate the rules, he should've quit the union.
I got the idea, although I’m just guessing, that he’s in the union grudgingly because so many jobs in the industry require it. I don’t know an easy solution for that situation. Just flouting the rules he agreed to seems wrong. Maybe he was making a statement by trying to get kicked out or censured just for saying "Star Trek" at a Star Trek convention, or maybe he just wanted to get attention for himself, either for its own sake or to get some non-union project he wants.
You can't "replace" that kind of work with automation, because that doesn't replace creativity or talent with something equivalent, it merely eliminates it.
In other words, the reason technology replacing drudge work makes the world better is because it frees the human mind to be more active and creative. Replacing artistic jobs with AI does the exact opposite of that.
Now, if there's a way to use AI in service to human artists' ideas and expression of their talent, that's fine. But that's not what the studio heads want. They want to reduce "content creation" to a mindless automated process with no individual will behind it.
You say above that you can’t replace creative work with automation. Then you say the studios want to reduce content creation to an automated process. In other words, the studios want something that can’t be done. My only point was that if it can be done, a strike won’t be able to stop it. Maybe it cannot be done, as you say, and that part of the strike is unnecessary.
My speculation, without really knowing the details, is that they mention “AI” because it’s a hot buzzword that gets attention. The real issues, I suspect, are modifying the contract to cover streaming and to cover payments for actors’ images spliced into different films. It makes sense they’d need to come to an agreement on these new issues. The union adding a buzzword just makes it easier for journalists looking to write about hot new trends to write about the strike.
I hope they work it out because I want the shows to keep coming.