Current:Home > NewsNetflix faces off with creators, advertises for a $900,000 A.I. product manager -WealthEngine
Netflix faces off with creators, advertises for a $900,000 A.I. product manager
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:34:01
While creative talent is sweating it out on picket lines, Netflix is hard at work developing its machine learning infrastructure.
Streaming video giant Netflix is looking to hire artificial intelligence specialists, dangling one salary that pays as much as $900,000, even as Hollywood actors and writers are in the midst of a historic strike that aims to curtail the industry's use of A.I.
One job posting, for a product manager of Netflix's machine learning platform, lists a total compensation range of $300,000-$900,000. "You will be creating product experiences that have never been done before," the listing boasts.
Netflix is also on the hunt for a senior software engineer to "[develop] a product that makes it easy to build, manage and scale real life [machine learning] applications," for an annual income between $100,000 and $700,000, as well as a machine-learning scientist to "develop algorithms that power high quality localization," with a total pay between $150,000 and $750,000.
- Hollywood strikes having ripple effect on British entertainment
- Georgia movie industry hit amid ongoing Hollywood strike
- Hollywood strikes could fuel rise of influencer content
A spokesperson for Netflix declined to comment on the job postings and referred CBS MoneyWatch to a statement from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which is representing studios (including Paramount Global, the parent company of CBS News) in negotiations with writers and actors.
Netflix relies heavily on machine learning for its success, according to the company's website.
"We invest heavily in machine learning to continually improve our member experience and optimize the Netflix service end-to-end," the company says. While the technology has historically been used for Netflix's recommendation algorithm, the company is also using it "to help shape our catalog" and "to optimize the production of original movies and TV shows in Netflix's rapidly growing studio," according to the site.
The company is also seeking a technical director of AI/machine learning for its gaming studio, where Netflix is building a team to eventually "[build] new kinds of games not previously possible without ongoing advances AI/ML technologies." That position pays $450,000 to $650,000 annually.
Generative A.I. and the strike
The use of so-called generative A.I., the technology underpinning popular apps like ChatGPT and MidJourney, has been at the heart of the negotiations between movie studios on one side and creators and performers on the other.
Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, the chief negotiator for SAG-AFTRA, which represents actors, has called the technology "an existential threat" to the profession. According to the union, studios have "proposed that our background performers should be able to be scanned, get paid for one day's pay, and the company should be able to own that scan, that likeness, for the rest of eternity, without consideration," Crabtree-Ireland said.
The AMPTP, the trade group representing the studios, disputed this characterization, telling CBS MoneyWatch that the studios' proposal only permitted a company to use a background actor's replica "in the motion picture for which the background actor is employed," with other uses subject to negotiation.
Writers fear that A.I. will be used to reduce their pay and eliminate ownership of their work.
"The immediate fear of A.I. isn't that us writers will have our work replaced by artificially generated content. It's that we will be underpaid to rewrite that trash into something we could have done better from the start," screenwriter C. Robert Cargill said on Twitter. "This is what the WGA is opposing and the studios want."
Already, many media outlets have adopted the use of A.I. to write articles, often with error-ridden results. Disney is also advertising for generative A.I. jobs, according to The Intercept, which first reported on the job listings. And some video game studios are using A.I. to write characters for games.
- In:
- Netflix
veryGood! (84)
Related
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Indiana police investigate shooting that left 3 people dead
- Iowa vs. Northwestern at Wrigley Field produced fewer points than 6 Cubs games there this year
- Appeals court pauses Trump gag order in 2020 election interference case
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Luis Diaz sends a message for his kidnapped father after scoring for Liverpool
- Judge in Trump fraud trial issues new gag order on attorneys after dispute over clerk
- We knew Tommy Tuberville was incompetent, but insulting leader of the Marines is galling
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- This winning coach is worth the wait for USWNT, even if it puts Paris Olympics at risk
Ranking
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Online database launched to track missing and murdered Indigenous people
- Offshore wind projects face economic storm. Cancellations jeopardize Biden clean energy goals
- Putin revokes Russia's ratification of nuclear test ban treaty
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- AP Top 25: USC drops out for first time under Lincoln Riley; Oklahoma State vaults in to No. 15
- Nepal earthquake kills more than 150 people after houses collapse
- Online database launched to track missing and murdered Indigenous people
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Boy killed in Cincinnati shooting that wounded 5 others, some juveniles, police say
Foundation will continue Matthew Perry's work helping those struggling with 'the disease of addiction'
Colorado football players get back some items stolen from Rose Bowl locker room
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Tom Sandoval Reveals the Real Reason He Doesn't Have His Infamous Lightning Bolt Necklace
Family with Chicago ties flees Gaza, arrives safely in Egypt
Forever Missing Matthew Perry: Here Are the Best Chandler Bing Episodes of Friends