October 9th news, last weekOpenAI Launch Sora 2 The video generator claimed that the company had taken measures to acquiesce in “prohibiting the creation of images of public figures”. However, the creators and viewers of Sora 2 found that there was a major loophole in the ban -- allowing for the production of video content from the dead public figures。

1AI notes that in social media today, examples of this type of use of AI technology to bring the late celebrity back to life are: Tupac Shakur talking to Malcolm X; Bruce Lee hosting a DJ performance on the theme of Dragon Energy; Michael Jackson performing a single comedy in the kitchen; Stephen Hawking's wheelchair flipping on a giant skate slope; Mr. Freder Rogers' guest Jackass; Kurt Cobain stealing Kentucky's chicken; Dr. Martin Luther King's important speech in Babaland。
OpenAI will post dynamic watermarks on each video generated to reduce the risk of the audience being misled by false images. Nevertheless, it is clear that seeing dead celebrities used as props by AI tools would be discomfort to their relatives and fans。
“Please don't send me any more AI videos about my father,” Zelda Williams wrote on Monday in the deleted Instagram dynamic (which has been archived). She was referring to her late father, Robin Williams. "Don't think that I'd want to see it, or that I'd accept it -- I wouldn't, and I'd never... it was stupid, waste time and energy. Believe me, this is not what he wants to see."
It's important to mention Robin Williams' own possible attitude. OpenAI points out that living users (including public figures) can choose to enter Sora 2's "cameos" function by scanning their faces with smartphones, so that their image can be "highly authentic" and directly embedded in any Sora scene. The company promised that the users involved in the function would “take control of their own portrait” and that the feature was designed “to ensure that your voice and image are used only with your express consent”. In addition, users can withdraw access to their scanning images at any time and have control over the content of other people using the scanning images。
It is clear, however, that the late public figures were unable to give their consent to Sora 2's negotiator function or to exercise such “end-to-end” portrait control. And OpenAI seems to acquiesce. “We have no further comment at this time, but we do allow it to be generatedHistorical FiguresImage, "An OpenAI spokesman recently presented to PCMag。
OpenAI has been forced to adjust the way Sora deals with fictional copyright works. Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman said last weekend that copyright owners now had to choose “opt-in” on their own initiative to appear in Sora 2 (instead of the “out” mechanism in the early days of the service), and that they would receive a share of the income from the relevant Sora video. Altman also promised that “more change is coming,” and stressed that “we will keep it coming fast - there may be some right decisions and mistakes, but we value feedback and we will quickly correct mistakes”。