Many celebrities, including numerous liberals who have previously publicly criticized Donald Trump, are now requesting his assistance in resisting big tech proposals related to AI.
On the first day of his second term, President Trump introduced a substantial $500 billion initiative aimed at developing artificial intelligence projects within the United States.
The project called ‘Stargate’ will also create an estimated over 100,000 jobs.
OpenAI and Google informed Washington the following week that they interpret American copyright laws as permitting AI companies to train systems using copyrighted material without obtaining permission.
The liberal stars – including Ben Stiller, Olivia Wilde, Cynthia Erivo, Aubrey Plaza, Paul McCartney, Mark Ruffalo and Cate Blanchett – are asking Trump to push back on this.
They write that if OpenAI and Google were allowed to do this, it would ‘freely exploit America’s creative and knowledge industries, despite [OpenAI and Google’s] substantial revenues and available funds.’
‘We firmly believe that America’s global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries,’ the letter says in part.
‘AI companies are asking to undermine this economic and cultural strength by weakening copyright protections for the films, television series, artworks, writing, music and voices used to train AI models at the core of multibillion-dollar corporate valuations.’

Hundreds of celebrities, including many liberals who have publicly insulted Donald Trump in the past, are now begging for his help in pushing back against big tech proposals on AI

The liberal stars – including Ben Stiller (pictured), Olivia Wilde , Cynthia Erivo , Aubrey Plaza , Paul McCartney , Mark Ruffalo and Cate Blanchett – are asking Trump to push back on this
Many of the stars who signed the letter have slammed the president in the past.
Stiller, one of the biggest names on the list, called a 2017 Trump press conference the ‘worst message I have ever heard a president put out to the world.’
‘I despise Donald Trump with all my guts, and his speech last night only confirmed what a pathetic, petulant, dishonest pig he is,’ wrote actress Olivia Wilde that same year.
Director Ron Howard, who also signed, said in 2020 Trump is ‘a self-serving, dishonest, morally bankrupt ego maniac who doesn’t care about anything or anyone but his fame and bank account.’
Mark Ruffalo said earlier this year: ‘There is no one keeping America safe from being looted by Trump and Elon.’
He also calls his performance in the box office bomb Mickey 17 an ‘understated’ imitation of Trump and called his character a ‘petty dictator,’ according to Deadline.
Other big-name signatories include: Guillermo del Toro, Natasha Lyonne, Paul McCartney, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Cord Jefferson, Bette Midler, Ava Duvernay, Paul Simon, Ángel Manuel Soto, Taika Waititi, Ayo Edebiri, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Lily Gladstone, Sam Mendes, Brit Marling, Janelle Monáe, Bryn Mooser, Rian Johnson, Paul Giamatti, Maggie Gylenhall, Alfonso Cuaron, Judd Apatow, Kim Gordon, Chris Rock and Michaela Coel.
In January, Trump hosted SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, Oracle’s Larry Ellison and OpenAI’s Sam Altman in the Roosevelt Room Tuesday afternoon to tout $500 billion of investment to build artificial intelligence infrastructure in the U.S.





‘I despise Donald Trump with all my guts, and his speech last night only confirmed what a pathetic, petulant, dishonest pig he is,’ wrote actress Olivia Wilde in 2017, now asking for Trump’s help

Mark Ruffalo said earlier this year: ‘There is no one keeping America safe from being looted by Trump and Elon’

Cynthia Erivo is another celebrity who signed the letter after being critical of Trump in the past
The new entity will be called Stargate.
The initiative will build data centers in Texas and work on generating more electricity to develop fast-moving AI.
‘What we want to do is we want to keep it in this country,’ Trump said. ‘China is a competitor, others are competitors.’
Ellison touted how AI could be used to improve patient care and cure diseases in the medical field.