The memeification of Sora 2
Briefly

The memeification of Sora 2
"The social app draws entirely from artificial intelligence: Instead of sharing photos and videos of themselves, users can opt in for "cameos" and create fake clips that depict themselves or their friends in any scenario imaginable. It's mostly being used to make viral meme content and the type of short-form videos you'd scroll past on TikTok, albeit with deepfakes. Sora doesn't allow you to make videos of other living people ( dead celebrities and SpongeBob SquarePants characters are fair game) unless given express permission."
"Another X user used Sora to make an AI video of Altman wearing baggy clothes and outfit and thick gold chains, rapping about his company's success. "Sam Altman dressed like a 2000s rapper is rapping about how Sora is bankrupting all other AI video companies, ending every line with 'what happened to that boy, brrr," they posted. Responding to the influx of memes, Altman wrote on X,"
Sora 2 is a social app that generates videos entirely with artificial intelligence by letting users opt into "cameos" to create fabricated clips of themselves or consenting friends in any imagined scenario. The app is largely producing viral meme-style short videos similar to TikTok content, often using deepfakes. The platform restricts creating videos of living people without permission but allows depictions of deceased celebrities and fictional characters. Early viral outputs have centered on CEO Sam Altman in various humorous and humiliating scenarios. Reactions range from playful meme-sharing to concerns that the app encourages fake portrayals of crimes and humiliation.
Read at Fast Company
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