
"Sora is a TikTok-style app, featuring a feed of AI videos and the tools to easily create more. It uses OpenAI's latest video generation model, which can spin up realistic-looking clips from text prompts. From the start, those clips included various copyright characters, because OpenAI had decided to require copyright holders to individually opt out of having their work appear on the app, rather than opt in, the Wall Street Journal reported."
"In a blog post, Altman wrote that since people are now using the Sora app, the San Francisco company no longer has to "theorize" about what users and "rightsholders" want. Contrary to the reported original opt-out plan, he said OpenAI would "give rightsholders more granular control over generation of characters." Sora users can agree to having their faces used in others' videos; Altman wrote that characters' copyright holders would now get a similar "opt-in model.""
Sora is a short-form, TikTok-style app that features a feed of AI-generated videos and tools to create more. The app uses OpenAI's latest video-generation model to produce realistic-looking clips from text prompts. Initial outputs included recognizable copyrighted characters because OpenAI planned an opt-out approach for copyright holders. After quick popularity, OpenAI reversed course and implemented an opt-in model giving copyright holders granular control over character generation. Users can consent to using their faces, and rights holders can specify permitted uses or block usages entirely. The opt-in change appears to be in effect and prompted user reactions on social platforms and app reviews.
Read at SFGATE
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