Robin Williams' daughter Zelda once again denounced the AI video featuring a portrait of her late father, asking fans to stop sending her way.
The filmmaker who directed 2024's “Lisa Frankenstein” announced her appeal to the Instagram story on Monday, where she asked fans to “stop sending dad's AI videos.”
“Don't believe I want to see it or believe that I understand, I don't, and I don't,” Williams wrote. “If you're just trying to fool me, I've seen something worse, I'll limit and move on.”
She continued: But if you have good sense, stop this on him and me, everyone will stop completely. It's stupid, it's a waste of time and energy, trust me, it's not what he wants. ”

Williams denounced the evolving technology of blowing up AI for telling the “legacy of the real people” and condensing the late stars into “terrifying tiktok slops.”
After calling it all “crazy,” Williams said, “You're not making art, you're making hot dogs that are disgusting from human life, from the history of art and music.
She tracked the statement in a small note of conclusions that refused to praise AI as the “future.”
Williams said: “AI is just recycled and regurgitating the past so badly to rediscover it. You're incorporating centipedes of human content.
Williams previously defended SAG-AFTRA's decision to negotiate recreation in 2023, opposing his father's AI iteration.
At the time, she called her father's AI recreation “personally hindering.”
The Oscar winner died of suicide in 2014 at the age of 63. The actor's autopsy report revealed that he is suffering from dementia in the Lewy body, a neurodegenerative disease that can cause movement problems, sleep problems, hallucinations and other symptoms.
