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OpenAI’s Sora: The devil is in the ‘details of the data’


Join leaders in Boston on March 27 for an exclusive night of networking, insights, and conversation. Request an invite here. For OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, an exclusive Wall Street Journal interview with personal tech columnist Joanna Stern yesterday seemed like a slam-dunk. The clips of OpenAI’s Sora text-to-video model, which was shown off in a […]

For OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, an exclusive Wall Street Journal interview with personal tech columnist Joanna Stern yesterday seemed like a slam-dunk. Generative AI copyright battles have been brewing for over a year, and many stakeholders, from authors, photographers and artists to lawyers, politicians, regulators and enterprise companies, want to know what data trained Sora and other models — and examine whether they really were publicly available, properly licensed, etc. Companies like OpenAI, Google and Meta might have the advantage in the short-term, but in the long run, I wonder if today’s issues around AI training data could wind up being a devil’s bargain.

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