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12 creators showcase mind-blowing videos they created using Sora

OpenAI’s text-to-video tool, Sora, is on everybody’s mind thanks to some of some seriously mind-boggling videos being shared on social media.

OpenAI’s new product is currently only available for select people, including cybersecurity professionals, artists, and content creators. While the rest of the world is waiting with bated breath to try it, those who have access to it and making the most of it, and clearly the sky’s the limit for their imagination.

The AI research and development company hasn’t revealed the timeline for the Sora’s public release as it’s being tested to make sure users find it safe. Nonetheless, the tool is capable of creating videos with complex scenes and multiple characters that are up to one minute long – and all of this while only using text prompts.

Ever since the technology was made available to some lucky creators, creators have taken to X/Twitter to flaunt their best work.

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Creators showcase videos created with Sora

Truly breathtaking.

AI consultant reimagines Yosemite Park in a Panorama view.

An out-of-the-world experience.

Too cute to handle.

As real as it can get.

Hard to believe.

The video quality is unreal.

That can’t be AI!

We hope that isn’t real.

Sora makes anything possible.

‘Near perfect’ indeed.

AI makes the future seem scary.

OpenAI tests new AI tool before making it public

According to OpenAI, Sora was created to “help people solve problems that require real-world interaction.”

The tool is invented keeping creative professionals in mind and the company relies on their feedback before releasing it to the public.

The new AI model not only recreates what the prompts describe but also imagines the same in a real-life situation to make the user experience as personal as possible.

OpenAI’s official website notes that the current model has “weaknesses” causing hindrance while trying to imagine anything accurately. “For example, a person might take a bite out of a cookie, but afterward, the cookie may not have a bite mark,” it states.

Furthermore, the company is taking “several important safety steps” before Sora is made available to anyone. It focuses on eliminating misinformation, hateful content, violence, and more.

Despite the extensive research, the company says, it’s not possible to predict entirely how the tool may be beneficial to users or how the same can be misused.