A videographer closing his 10-year-old business has said the "influx of AI" means his workload had "plummeted".

David Johnson, from Chatteris in Fenland, said his company DMJ-Imagery would shut in April after demand for his services "dried up" over the last 12 months.

He suggested businesses were turning to artificial intelligence (AI) for work he might previously have been paid for, such as film production, video editing and script writing.

The Association of Photographers (AOP) trade body told the BBC that videographers faced a "relentless threat to their livelihoods" due to the "increasing encroachment" of Generative AI.

This is technology that can produce images, video, audio and text with simple text prompts and minimal human input.