The model, which will not be launching in Europe, comes in different versions with varying capabilities.
OpenAI has released its latest artificial intelligence (AI) model, the text-to-video generator Sora.
However, in an announcement yesterday (9 December), OpenAI said that while Sora will debut in the US as well as to “most countries internationally,” the company has “no timeline” yet for launching in the UK or Europe.
The model comes in varying versions with differing capabilities. Owners of a ChatGPT Plus account will receive access to the version of Sora where users can create up to 50 videos at 480p resolution or fewer videos at 720p a month. While a $200-a-month ChatGPT Pro plan will let users create 10-times more videos, in higher resolutions and allow for longer video durations.
Along with this, OpenAI is also releasing Sora Turbo, a new standalone version of the model where users can generate videos with up to 1080p resolution, 20 seconds long with varying aspect ratios. Users can also insert their own inputs to remix the content generated by Sora.
According to OpenAI, Sora comes with Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) metadata, which will allow for increased transparency in identifying if a video has been created using AI.
The company initially announced that it will use C2PA guidelines to add metadata to Dall-E, its text-to-image generator earlier this year.
Moreover, acknowledging these measures to be “imperfect,” OpenAI also announced further “safeguards” like visible watermarks by default and an internal search tool that users can use to verify if a content came from Sora.
The AI juggernaut also announced that it is blocking child sexual abuse material as well as sexual deepfakes on Sora, and has banned model for those under 18. In comparison, OpenAI recommends that users between 13 and 18 take parental consent before using its text generating model, ChatGPT.
Sora, which was initially announced in February this year, was reportedly leaked by a group of protesting artists earlier last month, who claimed in an open letter that they had been “lured into ‘art washing’ to tell the world that Sora is a useful tool for artists”.
These artists were given early-access to Sora to provide the company unpaid feedback. The group said that hundreds of artists provided OpenAI, “unpaid labour through bug testing, feedback and experimental work”, with a few artists receiving the opportunity through a competition to screen their Sora-created films, which it claimed was “minimal compensation”.
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