OpenAI launches new AI video app spun from copyrighted content

OpenAI logo is seen in this illustration taken March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

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OpenAI is releasing an AI video-generating app called Sora
that lets people create and share AI videos that can be spun from copyrighted
content and shared to social media-like streams.
Copyright owners, such as television and movie studios, must
opt out of having their work appear in the video feed, company officials said,
describing it as a continuation of its prior policy toward image generation.
The copyright policy is likely to ruffle feathers throughout
Hollywood.
The ChatGPT-maker has been in talks with a variety of
copyright holders in recent weeks to discuss the policy, company officials
said. At least one major studio, Disney, has already opted out of having their
material appear in the app, people familiar with the matter said.
Earlier this year, OpenAI pressed the Trump administration
to declare that training AI models on copyrighted material fell under the
"fair use" provision in copyright law.
"Applying the fair use doctrine to AI is not only a
matter of American competitiveness — it’s a matter of national security,"
OpenAI argued in March.
Without this step, it said at the time, U.S. AI companies
would lose their edge over rivals in China.
OpenAI officials said it put measures in place to block
people from creating videos of public figures or other users of the app without
permission. Public figures and others’ likeness cannot be used until they
upload their own AI-generated video and give their permission.
One such step is a "liveness check" where the app
prompts a user to move their head in different directions and recite a random
string of numbers. Users will be able to see drafts of videos that involve
their likeness.
Videos in the Sora app can be up to 10 seconds long. OpenAI
built a feature it calls Cameo that will let users create realistic-looking AI
versions of themselves and insert themselves into AI-generated scenes.
"Our companies are in the business of competing for
time and modifying consumer behavior," Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak
said in a research note, adding he saw Sora app as a direct competitor to
longstanding social media and digital content platforms from Meta, Google,
TikTok and others.
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