OpenAI Handles Copyright Concerns For Sora
- TecRes

- Nov 1
- 1 min read

OpenAI's app for creating videos using AI is called Sora. It serves as a competitor to other AI video production apps such as Runway. Sora has been demonstrating upward trends in usage and overall growth ever since it was released. The app itself is incredibly high quality and well-made. In fact, it recently became the #1 app on the iOS App Store. In other words, Sora is growing really fast - it's not easy to become the most downloaded app across all Apple devices. However, with more customers comes a growing demand that OpenAI must be capable of meeting. Since there are more people using the product, there are more potential ways that a problem could present itself, such as the rules for the generated content. The company has shifted its focus to the legal side of things for now. Recently, OpenAI has been addressing copyright concerns. OpenAI is giving people who generate content or own content related to Sora detailed options to regulate how their characters and material are employed on the internet. This includes choices such as being able to block the usage of the content, to erasing other uses of the content. CEO Sam Altman has also announced plans to share revenue with copyright holders who opt in to this. These measures arrive as industries like entertainment navigate the balance between innovation and creator rights. OpenAI is testing this revenue-sharing model now, targeting a more widespread rollout in the future.











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