LOS ANGELES — Scarlett Johansson, one of Hollywood’s most respected voices in both film and public discourse, has issued a stark warning about the unchecked rise of Artificial Intelligence. Drawing a powerful parallel to Victor Frankenstein, the ill-fated scientist in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818), Johansson cautioned that today’s rapid, unexamined embrace of AI mirrors Frankenstein’s fatal flaw — creation without conscience.

Her message is clear: the danger lies not in invention itself, but in the irresponsible abandonment of ethical oversight once that invention comes to life. Johansson urges society to “stop, reflect, and ensure that technological progress does not overwhelm human intelligence and responsibility.”
The Creator’s Mistake: Power Without Responsibility
In Shelley’s novel, Victor Frankenstein’s tragedy stems from his decision to reject the very life he created. Horrified by his success, he turns away from his “Creature,” leaving it to navigate a world that fears and misunderstands it. Johansson sees a chilling modern parallel in the tech industry’s race to deploy AI systems capable of humanlike reasoning, speech, and creativity—often with little regard for consent, transparency, or moral accountability.
“The problem isn’t creation,” Johansson said in a recent statement. “It’s the refusal to take responsibility for what we create.”
Her comments reflect a growing sentiment among artists, ethicists, and policymakers that the AI revolution has outpaced society’s capacity to manage it.
The AI Voice Controversy: When Art Becomes Reality

Johansson’s warnings carry particular weight because she has lived through a real-world version of the ethical dilemma she describes.
In May 2024, controversy erupted when OpenAI released a new voice for its ChatGPT system, called Sky. Almost immediately, listeners noted the uncanny similarity between Sky’s tone and Johansson’s distinctive voice — the same voice that became iconic through her portrayal of “Samantha,” an empathetic AI operating system, in the 2013 film Her.
Johansson soon revealed that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman had previously approached her in September 2023, inviting her to voice ChatGPT because he believed her sound would be “comforting to people.” She declined. Yet, months later, a remarkably similar voice appeared in the product.
The situation deepened when Altman posted the single word “Her” on X (formerly Twitter) shortly after the launch — a reference widely interpreted as an intentional nod to Johansson’s AI character. The actress quickly hired legal counsel, prompting OpenAI to pause the use of the Sky voice.
The episode perfectly encapsulates Johansson’s Frankenstein analogy: a company so enamored with its technological potential that it neglected to ask whether it should — or whether doing so would cross an ethical boundary.
The Broader Implications: When Technology Outpaces Humanity
Johansson’s dispute with OpenAI is not just about one voice — it represents a watershed moment for creators, workers, and private citizens whose likenesses, voices, or creative outputs can now be digitally replicated without consent.
| Area of Concern | Relevant Data / Context | Implication of the “Frankenstein” Mistake | 
|---|---|---|
| Actors’ Likeness | The 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike made AI regulation a central demand, insisting on informed consent and fair compensation for digital replicas. | AI-generated performances without human consent or pay risk devaluing the very people who built the industry. | 
| Voice Cloning | Tech analysts noted Sky’s striking similarity to Johansson’s voice, highlighting AI’s growing power to replicate personal attributes. | A desire for “perfection” outweighed ethical clearance — echoing Frankenstein’s hubris. | 
| Legal Frameworks | Experts emphasize outdated Right of Publicity laws that fail to protect unique voices and likenesses in the digital age. | The law lags behind innovation, leaving creators vulnerable until irreversible harm occurs. | 
These trends collectively point to a world where digital creation risks detaching from human accountability — where the “creature” of technology could outgrow the control of its creator.
Echoes of Frankenstein: The Real Monster is Neglect
For Johansson, the lesson of Frankenstein is timeless: the monster was never born evil — it became one through neglect. Likewise, she warns, the danger of AI lies not in the code itself but in the moral abdication of those who build and deploy it.
Her stance is not anti-technology; rather, it is a call for ethical guardrails that prioritize humanity over ambition. “Innovation without empathy,” she implies, “is just another experiment waiting to go wrong.”

As governments, corporations, and creators grapple with how to regulate AI, Johansson’s plea cuts to the philosophical core of the issue. If society fails to embed moral responsibility into its technological pursuits, it risks creating something far worse than Shelley’s fictional creature: a future driven by intelligence without integrity.
In her words — and in the haunting echo of Shelley’s warning — the message is unmistakable: Before we create, we must learn to care.
 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			