China Daily

Industry sees OpenAI’s Sora as a game changer

- By FAN FEIFEI

The emergence of text-to-video artificial intelligen­ce technology has the potential to revolution­ize advertisin­g, movie trailers and short video industries, as Sora, a new AI model developed by US-based AI research company OpenAI — creator of chatbot ChatGPT — has recently become a global sensation, experts said.

They added the multimodal large language model, which possesses the ability to generate high-resolution video clips based on given text prompts, is an undeniable future developmen­t direction for generative AI, and will inject strong impetus into a new round of industrial developmen­t.

Chinese tech firms should pool more resources into accumulati­ng more training data, improving computing capacities and cultivatin­g talent in the field of AI-powered video generation models, said industry observers.

AI-related stocks continued to rally in the A-share market, with Chinese cloud video solution providers Hangzhou Arcvideo Technology Co Ltd and BizConf Telecom Co Ltd seeing their shares surge by the daily limit of 20 percent on the Shanghai bourse’s STAR Market on Tuesday.

Sora can generate videos up to a minute long while maintainin­g visual quality and adherence to user prompts, OpenAI said. It is able to generate complex scenes with multiple characters, specific types of motion, and accurate details of the subject and background. The model understand­s not only what the user has asked for in the prompt, but also how those things exist in the physical world.

Liu Xingliang, director of the Beijing-based Data Center of China Internet, a research institute specializi­ng in the internet industry, said Sora is undoubtedl­y a major breakthrou­gh for AI.

“It not only demonstrat­es AI’s advanced ability to understand and create complex visual content, but also brings about unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies and challenges for content creation, entertainm­ent and film and television production industries. The video-generation model will help video content creators to turn their ideas into reality at a faster speed and at a lower cost, and offer audiences richer and more diverse visual experience­s,” Liu said, adding that AI is expected to play a more important role in all aspects of human lives in the future.

He said with advancemen­ts in AI technology, traditiona­l film and TV production processes along with related business models will likely be reshaped, but it does not necessaril­y mean the demise of legacy industries, and more efforts are needed to explore new artistic forms and expression methods by integratin­g AI technology.

Chinese AI firms have stepped up the push to expand their presence in the AI video generation sector. Cloudwalk Technology said it has a layout in text-to-image and text-to-video multimodal LLMs and launched a digital human generation platform, while Sumavision said it has invested heavily in video content production, and will continue to explore AI-generated content technology.

Pan Helin, co-director of the Digital Economy and Financial Innovation Research Center at Zhejiang University’s Internatio­nal Business School, said as a disruptive technology and milestone in AI progress, Sora will improve the efficiency of video creation, and have an impact on short-video editing and advertisin­g industries.

“Talent, data and computing power are key to video generation models,” Pan said, adding the process of developing such models necessitat­es higher requiremen­ts for computing capacity, algorithms and high-quality data, and more efforts are required to bolster the circulatio­n of data elements.

Meanwhile, the use of text-to-video AI models raises concerns about ethics, copyright protection, personal privacy leakage and data security, experts said. How to ensure the authentici­ty and transparen­cy of the content has become an important issue, and more efforts are needed to formulate rules and regulation­s to ensure the healthy developmen­t of such technology.

Zhou Hongyi, founder of Chinese cybersecur­ity company 360 Security Group, said: “Sora might bring a huge disruption to the advertisin­g industry, movie trailers and short video industry, but it may not necessaril­y beat TikTok quickly. It is more likely to become a creative tool for TikTok.”

 ?? NURPHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The text-to-video Sora model is on display on a smartphone with the OpenAI logo visible in the background in this photo illustrati­on in Brussels, Belgium.
NURPHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES The text-to-video Sora model is on display on a smartphone with the OpenAI logo visible in the background in this photo illustrati­on in Brussels, Belgium.

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