Applied Intelligence Appfigures' latest data shows new applications launched by OpenAI Sora exist iOS Some 627,000 downloads, more than ChatGPT First week performance at launch。

Sora was officially launched on September 30, and recorded 56,000 downloads on the same day and quickly joined the top three of the U.S. Applied Shop's comprehensive download list。
By October 3, it had risen to its top. By contrast, ChatGPT downloaded 660,000 iOS in the first week, but only in the United States market, and Sora covered both the United States and Canadian markets. If only the U.S. region is counted, Sora's first week of downloads is about 96% from ChatGPT。
It is worth noting that Sora still has an invitation system, while ChatGPT is open to the wider public when it is published。
This means that at a higher threshold, Sora still shows a strong user appeal。
Appfigures data also show that Sora received a peak of 1,078,000 downloads per day on 1 October and has since remained stable despite fluctuations。
However, behind the bright eyes, Sora also hides controversy。
According to CNBC, the American Film Association (MPA) has recently publicly stated that OpenAI's new video-generation model Sora 2 is being used for a large number of copyright-infringinged content creations, requiring companies to take immediate and decisive action to stop it。
In his statement, Charles Rivkin, Chief Executive Officer of the MPA, stated: "Since Sora 2 was released, videos of aggression against our members' films, dramas and characters have appeared on OpenAI platforms and social media. I'm sorry
The CEO of OpenAI, Sam Altman, then responded in a blog that the company would provide the copyrighter with "more nuance control" and would move from the previous "default permission, the copyrighter will have to offer" to the "required copyrighter's express authorization" model。
In recent years, controversy over AI and copyright has also been a major issue and challenge in the development of OpenAI。