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OpenAI's Chief Technology Officer, Mira Murati, has been at the center of controversy following a series of interviews with the Wall Street Journal regarding the company's upcoming text-to-video AI model, Sora. Murati revealed that Sora is set to be launched later this year, with plans to incorporate sound and eventually embed metadata as watermarks in Sora videos. OpenAI has granted early access to some individuals in the film industry for testing purposes. However, Murati's vague responses about the training data for Sora, particularly whether YouTube videos were used, have raised concerns. Despite being pressed for details, Murati's uncertainty about the specifics of the training data has sparked debate. This situation has highlighted the broader issue of transparency in the AI industry, with calls for clearer standards. The lack of specific information about the data used to train AI models like Sora has led to scrutiny, especially considering potential implications under regulations like the EU AI Act, which mandates transparency for high-risk AI systems.
OpenAI's Sora: The devil is in the 'details of the data' https://t.co/6FwlsFJiCy
Very few generative AI companies provide the public with concrete information on how they train their models. OpenAI's CTO continues this trend: "I'm just not going to go into the details of the data that was used." https://t.co/zDLVvdWKAM
ChatGPT developer OpenAI finds itself under fire once again following an interview about its text-to-video AI, Sora. Apparently, the company's CTO is "not sure" how the AI model was trained: https://t.co/qzPJBrKqLp #ai #openai #sora #soraai #artificialintelligence #aitech https://t.co/qQxg5xzkbg
how executives of any AI company SHOULD respond when asked how their algorithms were trained https://t.co/9WFHn1mity https://t.co/LGAhnO5SAJ
What an incredibly odd interview. How does the CTO of OpenAI not know what data was used to train one of its models? https://t.co/usXVCBknhp
OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati isn't offering a specific date but says you'll be able to try Sora later this year. https://t.co/p2qk7oyCAF
🚨The clip below could put OpenAI in trouble; here's why: In case OpenAI's Sora is classified as a high-risk AI system per the EU AI Act, they will have to comply with transparency obligations such as informing users about "training, validation and testing data sets used, taking… https://t.co/dr9oX8TPVg
CTO of OpenAI. The vague answer is somewhat concerning… (via WSJ) https://t.co/TB7TFHXAVe
🙍Interviewer: Did you train on YouTube videos? 🙎♀️Mira: I'm actually not sure… Translation: "We have YouTube videos downloaded & available for training; we routinely use them for experiments. I'm not sure if they were used specifically to train the model you're talking about." https://t.co/I86FwCGlxg
OpenAI CTO: We trained on public videos Interviewer: What kind of public videos Mira: Silence Interviewer: Like Youtube Mira: I don't know 🤣🤣🤣 ☠️☠️☠️ https://t.co/gbZF6kvqtx
Mira: We trained on public videos Interviewer: What kind of public videos Mira: Silence Interviewer: Like Youtube Mira: I don't know 🤣🤣🤣 https://t.co/gbZF6kvqtx
Watch: In an interview with @JoannaStern, OpenAI CTO says the company’s text-to-video model will be available this year but ducks questions on how the model was trained https://t.co/uym4vnZZmM https://t.co/uym4vnZZmM
Insightful @WSJ interview of CTO Mira Murati by @JoannaStern on the successes/failures, training, timelines and launch concerns around #Sora video generation. @MattVidPro @mreflow @icreatelife https://t.co/cZ0l2NZuoN
Mira Murati talked to the WSJ about Sora. Sora will be available this year. Plans are in place to add sound, and eventually, Sora videos will contain metadata as a watermark. OpenAI is currently giving some individuals in the film industry early access for testing. https://t.co/wCNmo4d62u
This is a notable issue in the LLM-driven AI industry. You don't get to claim that your AI is a "software engineer" because you tuned its responses to recognize a series of pre-programmed queries. There needs to be a better standard of transparency as it relates to AI… https://t.co/8pmtY6M28N