OpenAI regularly releases new videos generated by the Sora neural network based on simple text prompts, although the tool remains inaccessible to the public - except for a selected group of artists who have been given the opportunity to test the novelty.
The test group includes directors, writers, artists, marketers, and musicians - everyone who will be able to use the neural network in practice later:
- Walter Woodman, Sidney Lieder, Patrick Sederberg - members of the multimedia production company Shy Kids in Toronto. Walter directed the short film "Air Head."
- Paul Trillo - multidisciplinary artist, writer, and director.
- Nick Cleverov - creative director and co-founder of Native Foreign, a creative agency nominated for an Emmy Award.
- August Kamp - musician, researcher, creative activist, and multidisciplinary artist.
- Josephine Miller - co-founder and creative director of Oraar Studio, specializing in 3D visuals, augmented reality, and digital fashion.
- Don Allen Stevenson III - digital AR/XR artist, speaker, and consultant.
- Alex Reben - sculptor/artist and OpenAI artist.
Currently, you can watch 7 videos from the group ranging from 20 seconds to 1.5 minutes - all visually stunning, but mostly abstract. And sometimes they remind us of one of those crazy dreams that our subconscious mind sometimes offers - for example, "Beyond Our Reality" (second to last in the list) by Don Allen Stevenson III resembles a National Geographic film depicting previously unseen animals like girafflamingos, flying pigs, or whatchacods.
Meanwhile, as reported by Bloomberg, OpenAI is already planning to negotiate with major Hollywood studios, agencies, and producers this week about the possibility of using Sora.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the neural network will be available to the public within 2024, and in the future will be able to support audio and video editing, to make scenes even more realistic.
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