Sora’s fascinating video-verse
From animals cycling, to a bling zoo, creative prompts are generating videos on OpenAI’s generative video arm, which is exciting for some and scary for others
- Tech News
- 2 min read
Interesting prompts: It has been three days since OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced Sora, a video-generating software for minute-long videos based on text prompts.
The service, which is open to creators and cybersecurity professionals, saw captivating videos posted by creators.
These combined realistic scenarios, like a grandmother in a kitchen or a woman walking down the streets of Tokyo.
But it also unleashed bizarre creative ideas, like animals cycling to dogs on a podcast.
OpenAI Researcher Bill Peebles shared this
Still of video shared by OpenAI researcher | Bling Zoo
After Altman’s announcement, there was also indirect people participation as people suggested prompts to him on X, following which Altman posted the videos on X.
Freelance photographer Cate Bligh shared a prompt of an instructional cooking session for homemade gnocchi, hosted by a grandmother who is also a social media influencer. The backdrop was set in a rustic Tuscan country kitchen, with cinematic lighting.
Altman shared the
Still of video shared by OpenAI CEO | Grandma
CRED CEO Kunal Shah shared a prompt of a bicycle race on the ocean with different animals as athletes, who are riding the bicycles with a drone camera view.
Replying to him, Altman shared the imaginative yet real-looking video:
Still of video shared by OpenAI CEO | Cycling animals
In a twist of events, users shared original film clips that were mistaken as Sora-generated clips, the most notable one being a movie scene from Singham.
Noted psychologist Jordan Peterson
Jordan B Peterson on X | Singham
Users were fast to share skepticism, with a glitch
Cat waking up owner | Clip still
Others speculated of deepfakes, like forged crime scenes, and called for regulating the technology.
While generative technologies have the potential to cut automated and mundane tasks, they can also replace industries, if not select jobs.
The recent foray of OpenAI into videos can not automate many roles in the video industry across cinema, digital and news platforms, but also create dangerously real content.
Published By : Gauri Joshi
Published On: 18 February 2024 at 18:09 IST