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OpenAI recentlyshipped its text-to-video Sora AI model to general availabilityas part of its 12 days of shipmas extravaganza.
The model wasreleased in previewearlier this year in February.

OpenAI officially launched the AI video generation model Sora, on December 10, 2024.
This is despite being backed by OpenAI’s powerful and more capable Sora Turbo AI model.
The ChatGPT maker has seemingly remained mum about the model’s training source.
However, a report byTechCrunchsuggests Sora may have been trained on game content.

When debuting Sora in February, it was apparent that the AI model was trained using Minecraft videos.
As it now seems, Minecraft isn’t the only video game in Sora AI’s training chest.
OpenAI has publicly shared several clips of Sora AI-generated clips that are uncanny to the video games listed above.

Interestingly, Sora’s training material goes beyond video games.
Twitch streams could also be part of the material used to train the model.
TechCrunch admits the model is aggressively filtered to prevent copyright infringement issues.

The companies have been slapped with several lawsuits over the issue.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman admitteddeveloping tools like ChatGPT without copyrighted content is impossible.
The executive argued thatcopyright law doesn’t categorically forbid using copyrighted content to train AI models.

Training a generative AI model generally involves copying the training data.
Brownlee had early access to the tool, which allowed him to access its capabilities.
The AI-generated video caught the reviewer’s attention, especially the plant on the desk in the video.

Are my videos in that source material?
Is this exact plant part of the source material?
Is it just a coincidence?






