
"You get the idea. This is the inevitable outcome when you give humans the opportunity to create anything they want with very little effort. We are twisted and easily amused people. Also: I tried the new Sora 2 to generate AI videos - and the results were pure sorcery Human nature is like that. First, slightly less mature individuals will start thinking, "Hmm. What can I do with that? Let's make something odd or weird to give me some LOLs.""
"The inevitable result will be inappropriate themes or videos that are just so wrong on many levels. Then, the unscrupulous start to think. "Hmm. I think I can get some mileage out of that. I wonder what I can do with it?" These folks might generate an enormous amount of AI slop for profit, or use a known spokesperson to generate some sort of endorsement."
OpenAI's Sora 2 generative video tool rapidly enabled users to create highly realistic and often controversial short videos, producing bizarre and inappropriate content such as SpongeBob cooking meth and Ronald McDonald fleeing Batman. Ease of remixing allowed creation of fake endorsements, including clips of Sam Altman saying, "PAI3 gives you the AI experience that OpenAI cannot." Human tendencies toward amusement, profit, and malice drive both juvenile and unscrupulous misuse, generating large volumes of low-quality or deceptive output. The technology raises legal, ownership, ethical, and cultural concerns about attribution, authenticity, and potential harms from democratized generative video.
Read at ZDNET
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