Association of Cinema Monday called on Monday Openai take “immediate measures” to correct the system of refusal of copyright to Sora 2Since video tunes are distributed on the Internet.
MPA has published its first comment on the situation since last week release of artificial intelligence models for video, which allows users to create clips using characters protected by copyright, and has the burden of objections to copyright holders.
“Since the release of Sora 2, videos that violate the rights to films, show and characters of our participants have spread on the Openai service and social networks,” said Charles Rivkin, chairman and general director of MPA. “While Openai Refined “Soon” to the copyright holders will be given more control over the generation of characters, they must admit that their responsibility, and not by copyright holders, remains to prevent violations of rights to the Sora 2. Openai, it is necessary to take immediate and decisive measures to solve this problem. A well -established copyright law protects the rights of the creators and is applied here. ”
On Friday, the representative of Openai Sam Altman said that the Ura 2 update will soon provide the copyright holders with “more detailed control over the generation of characters”. But he did not guarantee that the materials protected by the copyright would be removed from the platform.
“There may be some extreme cases when generations pass through this, but they should not, and for our stack it works well, some iteration will be required,” he said in his blog.
Sora 2 was presented with the idea that the creators can refuse if they object to the use of their characters or works protected by copyright on the website. In accordance with the law on copyright, copyright holders can sue and receive compensation established by law for certain copyright violations – regardless of whether the offender offers to refuse to participate or not.
MPA clearly made it clear that the entertainment industry does not support the idea that the refusal system frees Openai from responsibility.
In June, Disney and Universal sued Midjourney for permission for users to create videos and photographs on their website that violate copyright. In September Warner Bros. She filed her own lawsuit against Midjourney. Midjourney resists, arguing that AI training is “conscientious use” in accordance with the copyright law and that if users violate copyrights, they do this in violation of the conditions for servicing the platform.