Tom Hanks says AI version of him used in ad without consent

 Tom Hanks has expressed concerns in the past about the use of AI in film and TV.
Tom Hanks has warned fans that an ad for a dental plan that appears to use his image is in fact fake and was created using artificial intelligence.
In a message posted to his 9.5 million Instagram followers, the actor said his image was used without his permission. âBEWARE!! Thereâs a video out there promoting some dental plan with an AI version of me. I have nothing to do with it,â Hanks wrote over a screenshot of a computer-generated image of himself from the clip.
The Oscar winner has expressed concerns in the past about the use of AI in film and TV, although he has not shied away from approving digitally altered versions of himself in film.
The 2004 computer-animated Christmas fantasy
featured a CGI version of Hanks. He was also de-aged in scenes in 2022 film .
Speaking with British comedian Adam Buxton on his podcast on April 18, just days before the start of the Hollywood writersâ strike, Hanks said of AI: âWe saw this coming. We saw that there was going to be this ability to take zeros and ones inside a computer and turn it into a face and a character. Now that has only grown a billionfold since then, and we see it everywhere.
âI can tell you that there [are] discussions going on in all of the guilds, all of the agencies, and all of the legal firms to come up with the legal ramifications of my face and my voice â and everybody elseâs â being our intellectual property.
âRight now if I wanted to, I could get together and pitch a series of seven movies that would star me in them in which I would be 32 years old from now until kingdom come. Anybody can now recreate themselves at any age they are by way of AI or deepfake technology.âÂ
 Hanks told Buxton that AI could allow a fake version of him to continue acting in perpetuity.
âI could be hit by a bus tomorrow, and thatâs it, but performances can go on and on and on and on. And outside of the understanding that itâs been done with AI or deepfake, thereâll be nothing to tell you that itâs not me and me alone. And itâs going to have some degree of lifelike quality. Thatâs certainly an artistic challenge, but itâs also a legal one.â
The US writersâ strike ended last week, with one of the major sticking points being concerns that unchecked AI could undermine the work of creatives.
The Writers Guild of America approved an agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television that features restrictions on how AI can be used in film and TV.
However, Sag-Aftra â the union representing Hollywood actors â remains on strike, meaning most productions cannot resume. The actorsâ strike began a few months after the writersâ strike, with pay, as well as concern over the use of AI in generating unapproved likenesses of actors, at the heart of the dispute. There are hopes the writersâ deal could help usher in a resolution to the Hollywood actorsâ strike.
In the Robert Zemeckis-directed film
, set for release next year, Tom Hanks will play younger versions of his character using a tool from Metaphysic.The AI company said it can create âhigh-resolution photorealistic faceswaps and de-ageing effects on top of actorsâ performances live and in real time without the need for further compositing or VFX workâ.