DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

OpenAI and Disney just ended the ‘war’ between AI and Hollywood with their $1 billion Sora deal—and OpenAI made itself ‘indispensable,’ expert says

December 11, 2025
in News
OpenAI and Disney just ended the ‘war’ between AI and Hollywood with their $1 billion Sora deal—and OpenAI made itself ‘indispensable,’ expert says

Disney’s $1 billion investment in OpenAI, announced Thursday morning—and its decision to let more than 200 Disney, Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars characters appear inside the Sora video generator—is more than a licensing deal. According to copyright and AI law expert Matthew Sag, who teaches at Emory University’s law school, the deal marks a strategic realignment that could reshape how Hollywood protects its IP in the face of AI-generated content that threatens to leech on their legally-protected magic. 

“AI companies are either in a position where they need to aggressively filter user prompts and model outputs to make sure that they don’t accidentally show Darth Vader, or strike deals with the rights holders to get permission to make videos and images of Darth Vader,” Sag told Fortune. “The licensing strategy is much more of a win-win.”

The three-year agreement gives OpenAI the right to ingest hundreds of Disney-owned characters into Sora and ChatGPT Image. Disney will also receive equity warrants and become a major OpenAI customer, while deploying ChatGPT internally. Sag said the deal itself will be a kind of “revenue-sharing.” “OpenAI hasn’t figured out the revenue model,” Sag said. “So I think making this just an investment deal, in some ways, simplifies it. For Disney … [OpenAI] will figure out a way to make this profitable at some point, and [Disney will] get a cut of that.”

Why this deal matters: the ‘Snoopy problem’

For more than a year, the biggest legal threat to large-scale generative AI has centered on what Sag calls the “Snoopy problem”: It is extremely difficult to train powerful generative models without some degree of memorization, and copyrightable characters are uniquely vulnerable because copyright protects them in the abstract.

Sag was careful to outline a key distinction. AI companies aren’t licensing the right to train on copyrighted works; they’re licensing the right to create outputs that would otherwise be infringing.

That’s because the case for AI companies training their models on unlicensed content is “very strong,” Sag said. Two recent court rulings involving Anthropic and Meta have strengthened those arguments.

The real stumbling block, Sag said, has always been outputs, not training. If a model can accidentally produce a frame that looks too much like Darth Vader, Homer Simpson, Snoopy, or Elsa, the fair use defense begins to fray.

“If you do get too much memorization, if that memorization finds its way into outputs, then your fair-use case begins to just crumble,” Sag said.

While it’s impossible to license enough text to train an LLM (“that would take a billion” deals, Sag said), it is possible to build image or video models entirely from licensed data if you have the right partners. This is why deals like Disney’s are crucial: They turn previously illegal outputs into legal ones, irrespective of whether the training process itself qualifies as fair use.

“The limiting principle is going to be essentially about whether—in their everyday operation—these models reproduce substantial portions of works from their training data,” Sag said.

The deal, Sag says, is also a hedge against Hollywood’s lawsuits. This announcement is “very bad” for Midjourney, who Disney is suing for copyright infringement,because it upholds OpenAI’s licensing deal as the “responsible” benchmark for AI firms.

This is also a signal about the future of AI data

Beyond copyright risk, the deal exposes another trend: the drying up of high-quality, unlicensed data on the public internet.

In a blog post, Sag wrote:

“The low-hanging fruit of the public internet has been picked,” he wrote. “To get better, companies like OpenAI are going to need access to data that no one else has. Google has YouTube; OpenAI now has the Magic Kingdom.”

This is the core of what he calls the “data scarcity thesis.” OpenAI’s next leap in model quality may require exclusive content partnerships, as opposed to more scraping.

“By entangling itself with the world’s premier IP holder, OpenAI makes itself indispensable to the very industry that threatened to sue it out of existence,” Sag wrote.

AI and Hollywood have spent three years locked in a cold war over training data, likeness rights and infringement. With Disney’s $1 billion investment, that era appears to be ending.

“This is the template for the future,” Sag wrote. “We are moving away from total war between AI and content, toward a negotiated partition of the world.”

The post OpenAI and Disney just ended the ‘war’ between AI and Hollywood with their $1 billion Sora deal—and OpenAI made itself ‘indispensable,’ expert says appeared first on Fortune.

A Hot Plant’s Mysterious Signal Makes Beetles Pollinate It
News

A Hot Plant’s Mysterious Signal Makes Beetles Pollinate It

by New York Times
December 11, 2025

If a plant wants to reproduce, there are a number of tricks it can use to lure a pollinator insect. ...

Read more
News

Turkey’s Largest City Is Threatened by a Lurking Seismic Catastrophe

December 11, 2025
News

Doxers Posing as Cops Are Tricking Big Tech Firms Into Sharing People’s Private Data

December 11, 2025
News

Highlights Kristi Noem defends Trump’s immigration policies before departing early from hearing

December 11, 2025
News

Pentagon Pete Blew Off In-House Probe Over Signalgate Scandal

December 11, 2025
Mace Claims She’s Gone Into Hiding in Unhinged Fox Interview

Mace Claims She’s Gone Into Hiding in Unhinged Fox Interview

December 11, 2025
MyPillow founder and Trump supporter Mike Lindell says he’s running for Minnesota governor in 2026

MyPillow founder and Trump supporter Mike Lindell says he’s running for Minnesota governor in 2026

December 11, 2025
U.S. Helped to Weaken Report at U.N. Environment Talks, Participants Say

U.S. Helped to Weaken Report at U.N. Environment Talks, Participants Say

December 11, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025