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OpenAI’s new AI-made videos are blowing people’s minds

OpenAI’s latest venture into AI might be its most impressive one to date. Dubbed “Sora,” this new text-to-video AI model has just opened its doors to a limited number of users who will get to test it. The company launched it by showing several videos made entirely by AI, and the end results are shockingly realistic.

OpenAI introduces Sora by saying that it can create realistic scenes based on text prompts, and the videos shared on its website serve to prove it. The prompts are descriptive, but short; I’ve personally used longer prompts just interacting with ChatGPT. For instance, to generate the video of wooly mammoths pictured above, Sora required a 67-word prompt that described the animals, the surroundings, and the camera placement.

Introducing Sora, our text-to-video model. Sora can create videos of up to 60 seconds featuring highly detailed scenes, complex camera motion, and multiple characters with vibrant emotions.

“Sora can generate videos up to a minute long while maintaining visual quality and adherence to the user’s prompt,” said OpenAI in its announcement. The AI can generate complex scenes filled with many characters, scenery, and accurate motion. To that end, OpenAI says that Sora predicts and reads between the lines as needed. “The model understands not only what the user has asked for in the prompt, but also how those things exist in the physical world,” OpenAI said. The model doesn’t just tackle characters, clothing, or backgrounds, but also creates “compelling characters that express vibrant emotions.”

Sora can also fill in the gaps in an existing video or make it longer, as well as generate a video based on an image, so it’s not all just text prompts. While the videos look good as screenshotted stills, they’re borderline mind-blowing in motion. OpenAI served up a wide range of videos to show off the new tech, including Cyberpunk-esque Tokyo streets and “historical footage” of California during the Gold Rush. There’s more, too, including an extreme close-up of a human eye. The prompts cover anything from cartoons to wildlife photography.

Sora still made some mistakes. Looking closer reveals that, for instance, some figures out in the crowd don’t have heads or move strangely. The awkward motion stood out at first glance in some samples, but the general weirdness took multiple viewings to spot. It might be a while before OpenAI opens Sora to the general public. Right now, the model will be tested by red teamers who will assess potential risks. Some creators will also get to start testing it now, while it’s still in the early stages of development.

AI is still imperfect, so I went in expecting something quite messy. Whether it’s the low expectations or Sora’s capabilities, I’m walking away impressed, but also mildly worried. We’re already living in a world where it’s hard to tell a fake from something real, and now, it’s not just images that are in jeopardy — videos are, too. However, Sora is hardly the first text-to-video model we’ve seen, such as Pika. Others are raising the flag as well, such as the popular tech YouTuber, Marques Brownlee, who tweeted that “if this doesn’t concern you at least a little bit, nothing will” in response to the Sora videos.

If OpenAI’s Sora is this good now, it’s hard to imagine what it’ll be capable of after a few years of further development and testing. This is the kind of tech that has the potential to displace many jobs — but, hopefully, like ChatGPT, it will instead coexist alongside human professionals. The AI race is unforgivingly fast and brutal. Industries have already adopted it, and the biggest AI companies are racing to put it in the hands of students through exclusive deals and discounts. Now, it seems the next avenue is giving universal access to all citizens, starting with ChatGPT Plus. 

What’s the deal?  GPT-5 is still very fresh, but it still somehow feels like it’s been around for a while — all because of the uproar that followed the launch. Many ChatGPT users had something to say about it, and unfortunately, not all of it was good. When upgrading the large language model (LLM) from GPT-4o to GPT-5, OpenAI gave it a whole new personality, and the difference can be quite jarring. Following complaints, OpenAI just made GPT-5 “warmer and friendlier.” But will that be enough for users to let go of GPT-4o?

OpenAI recently launched GPT-5, its latest large language model and a huge update to ChatGPT. While the new update has a lot going for it, claims are one thing, and reality is another. GPT-5 is said to be faster, less prone to hallucination and sycophantic behavior, and able to choose between fast responses and deeper “thinking” on the fly. How many of OpenAI’s claims are actually visible when using the chatbot? Let’s find out.

Upgrade your lifestyleDigital Trends helps readers keep tabs on the fast-paced world of tech with all the latest news, fun product reviews, insightful editorials, and one-of-a-kind sneak peeks.

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