📰 News Report
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences released updated Oscar eligibility rules last Friday, explicitly specifying for the first time that only acting “demonstrably performed by humans” and writing that “must be human-authored” can be nominated for an Academy Award.
The Academy described this rule change as a “substantive” modification to Oscar eligibility criteria. This marks the first time in the Academy’s history that acting and screenwriting have been explicitly required to be performed and created by humans.
Core Requirements of the New Rules
Under the updated eligibility requirements, the Academy has specified that performances must be “demonstrably performed by humans” and screenplays must be “human-authored.” This new rule comes as the use of AI technology in film production expands at an unprecedented pace.
However, the Academy did not issue a broad ban on AI use in films. For areas beyond acting and writing — such as visual effects, sound design, and other technical categories — the Academy stated that the use of AI tools “neither helps nor harms the chances of achieving a nomination.” The Academy emphasized: “When choosing which movie to award, the degree to which a human was at the heart of the creative authorship will be taken into account.”
Industry Context
In recent years, the application of AI in film and television production has drawn increasing attention. The late actor Val Kilmer (who died in 2025) is set to be recreated using AI technology to play a lead role in an upcoming film. Last year, London-based actor and comedian Eline van der Velden announced she had created an entirely fictional AI actor and made it “a global superstar.”
Two years ago, when the union representing Hollywood writers went on strike, a central issue in the dispute was film and TV studios using AI to write scripts.
Ongoing Legal Disputes
Meanwhile, Hollywood studios, actors, and writers have filed copyright infringement lawsuits against several AI companies, alleging that the training basis of AI models — the text, images, and video used to train large language models (LLMs) — infringes on human creators’ copyrights.
The Academy stated: “If questions arise regarding the aforementioned use of generative artificial intelligence, the Academy reserves the right to request more information about the nature of the use and human authorship.”
Analysts suggest that this new rule marks the traditional film industry’s first formal delineation of AI technology boundaries and could have far-reaching implications for AI applications across the entertainment industry.
Source: BBC News