In an interview, the actress stated:
What we create is being stolen from us.
According to her, the corporate principle of "doing more for less money" directly conflicts with the real value of creative labor. White believes that creators around the world are anxious because their uniqueness is being turned into a free resource for algorithms capable of reproducing years of craft in fractions of a second.
For the actress, this topic is personal. White not only works in voice acting, but also actively streams, and thousands of hours of recordings of her voice and image are already available online, making her an easy target for learning systems.
She emphasized that her voice and manner—the foundation of her profession—could be used without her knowledge to train AI and create a "fake actor." In her opinion, this undermines the very essence of creative identity, when a recognizable original is replaced by an echo of someone else's work without the author's consent.
At the same time, White does not reject the technology completely. She compares AI to the Internet and calls it a tool capable of expanding access to knowledge. The main problem the actress sees is that the development of technology has outpaced the discussion of ethics and copyright. According to her, the industry urgently needs to develop rules under which creators will receive recognition and reward if their works are used to train models.