Anabelle Colaco
05 Oct 2025, 22:37 GMT+10
SAN FRANCISCO, California: ChatGPT-maker OpenAI will soon roll out new tools allowing copyright owners to control how their characters and content are used in its AI video app, Sora, and will offer a revenue-sharing model for those who opt in, CEO Sam Altman said.
Altman wrote in a blog post that the company will provide rights holders "more granular control over generation of characters." The new system will let television and film studios, among others, decide whether to allow or block the use of their intellectual property in AI-generated videos.
The move comes amid growing scrutiny over how generative AI platforms use copyrighted material, as companies across the entertainment industry push for more explicit protections and compensation frameworks.
OpenAI launched Sora this week as a standalone app, initially in the U.S. and Canada. The app allows users to generate short, 10-second videos from text prompts. The app quickly gained popularity, with users creating and sharing clips that often borrow from familiar media franchises.
People familiar with the matter told Reuters that at least one major studio, Disney, has opted out of Sora, underscoring Hollywood's unease with AI-generated content.
Altman said OpenAI plans to introduce a revenue-sharing system to compensate copyright holders who allow their characters to appear in user-generated videos. "It will take some trial and error to figure out," he acknowledged, adding that the company intends to test different approaches before applying a unified framework across its products.
Sora's rapid rise highlights both the creative potential and legal challenges of AI video generation. Users have produced more content than expected, often aimed at niche audiences, Altman said, prompting OpenAI to accelerate plans for monetization.
Microsoft-backed OpenAI has been expanding its multimodal AI offerings since launching the Sora model for public use last year, competing with text-to-video tools from Meta and Google.
Meta recently unveiled its own short-form video platform, Vibes, featuring AI-generated clips designed for social media feeds. As these tools proliferate, pressure is mounting on tech firms to find a balance between innovation, user creativity, and copyright protection.
Get a daily dose of Central Coast News news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Central Coast News.
More InformationSAN FRANCISCO, California: ChatGPT-maker OpenAI will soon roll out new tools allowing copyright owners to control how their characters...
TOKYO, Japan: Asahi, best known for its Super Dry beer, Nikka Whisky, and a range of soft drinks, shut down order processing, shipping,...
OMAHA, Nebraska: Berkshire Hathaway will pay US$9.7 billion for Occidental Petroleum's chemical division in a deal that may mark Warren...
VALHALLA, New York: PepsiCo is preparing for one of the trickiest makeovers in its history: keeping snacks and drinks like Gatorade,...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Yahoo is close to selling AOL, one of the most recognizable names of the early internet, to Italian technology...
MONTREAL, Canada: Air Canada is turning to complimentary alcohol in economy class as a way to stand out and soothe passengers who are...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: On the morning of October 2, as thousands of federal employees remained at home facing furloughs and the looming...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: ChatGPT-maker OpenAI will soon roll out new tools allowing copyright owners to control how their characters...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The White House is pressuring nine major universities to sign onto President Donald Trump's political priorities...
LOS ANGELES, California: Tributes poured in from world leaders, celebrities, and conservationists following the death of Jane Goodall,...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: OpenAI launched a new social media app on September 30 that lets users create short videos with artificial...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: OpenAI unveiled a new feature that lets ChatGPT users buy products directly inside conversations, marking...
