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As AI gets more powerful, humans and human values must remain in charge

As AI gets more powerful, humans and human values must remain in charge

Two stylistically distinct films were shown in Chinese cinemas this summer, each depicting a future dominated by artificial intelligence (AI).
As the franchise finale,
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning revisits past missions, showcasing how deadly weapons that threaten humanity have evolved – from viruses and nuclear weapons to AI, now cast not merely as a tool but the villain's accomplice, even the puppet master. Meanwhile,
Ghost in the Shell , the 1995 anime film enjoying a 30th anniversary rescreening, offers a more philosophical approach, exploring the blurred line between humans and AI through a cyborg's existential quest, repeatedly asking: Who am I?
Both films reflect different anxieties over the rapid rise of AI: the fear of losing control and a deeper unease about the erosion of human subjectivity. In a future of human-machine symbiosis, if AI surpasses to become an equal or superior presence, can human-centred values still hold?
This year, tech giants including OpenAI, Anthropic and Google rolled out
AI agents back-to-back, built to automate end-to-end workflows with minimal human input.
Heralding AI agents as 'the next giant breakthrough', OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has overseen
two landmark releases this year. While Operator helps users fill out forms, order groceries and even complete purchases, Deep Research is designed to carry out complex, multi-step analyses at the level of a research analyst, completing in 'tens of minutes' what would take a human 'many hours'.
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