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

OpenAI is scrapping the Sora app to chase bigger AI goals

March 24, 2026
in News
OpenAI is scrapping the Sora app to chase bigger AI goals
The Sora by OpenAI logo appears on the app store.
OpenAI is discontinuing Sora, its AI text-to-video generator. Illustration by Thomas Fuller/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • OpenAI announced it is discontinuing its viral video app Sora.
  • The company plans to focus on robotics to solve “real-world, physical tasks,” a spokesperson said.
  • Sora’s demise followed its lead staffer’s description of the project’s economics as “unsustainable.”

OpenAI is pulling the plug on the Sora app — at least in the current form.

The company confirmed it will discontinue Sora as a consumer app and API, marking a sharp pivot away from one of its splashiest generative video experiments.

“We’ve decided to discontinue Sora in the consumer app and API,” an OpenAI spokesperson said. “As we focus and compute demand grows, the Sora research team continues to focus on world simulation research to advance robotics that will help people solve real-world, physical tasks.”

The discontinuation is a notable turn for a product that once embodied OpenAI’s creative ambitions. When Sora launched in late September 2025, it quickly went viral for generating realistic, cinematic video clips from text prompts.

The TikTok-esque app hit No. 1 on Apple’s App Store and hit 1 million downloads in under five days, according to October posts from Sora lead Bill Peebles, who described “surging growth” as the team raced to keep up with demand.

Headaches began almost as quickly as the hypetrain took off. OpenAI had to introduce guardrails after users generated videos of protected intellectual property, such as Pokémon’s Pikachu in “Saving Private Ryan,” and of historical figures like Martin Luther King Jr.

Even Cameo, the short-form video app where users can pay for personalized messages, sued OpenAI for trademark infringement after OpenAI named one of the Sora app’s core features “cameo.” (OpenAI later changed the name of the feature.)

Altman doubled down, saying that IP rights holders wanted to work with OpenAI.

The move to scrap Sora comes as OpenAI is increasingly focused on core products as it attempts to make money ahead of a potential IPO. In August, CEO Sam Altman hired Fidji Simo, the 40-year-old former Instacart CEO and longtime Meta executive, to become the company’s product head. She and the company are tasked with ensuring their powerful models can sustain the enormous cost of training and deployment.

“We cannot miss this moment because we are distracted by side quests,” Simo told employees at an all-hands meeting, according to a person familiar with her remarks. The company needs to nail productivity — primarily on the business side, and then on the consumer side, she said. “Everything else is going to have to take a backseat to those priorities.”

Tuesday’s announcement came three months after Disney announced that it would become the first major content license holder with OpenAI, as part of a three-year deal that included a $1 billion investment in the platform.

In December, Disney announced that it would become the first major content license holder on the platform as part of a three-year deal that included a $1 billion investment in OpenAI.

Disney acknowledged OpenAI’s move on Tuesday.

“As the nascent AI field advances rapidly, we respect OpenAI’s decision to exit the video generation business and to shift its priorities elsewhere,” a spokesperson from The Walt Disney Company said. “We appreciate the constructive collaboration between our teams and what we learned from it, and we will continue to engage with AI platforms to find new ways to meet fans where they are while responsibly embracing new technologies that respect IP and the rights of creators.”

OpenAI quickly made moves to try to monetize Sora’s growing user base and to limit free video generations. At the time, Peebles, in posts on X, framed the economics of the heavy demand for Sora as “completely unsustainable,” adding that “video models really are expensive!”

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post OpenAI is scrapping the Sora app to chase bigger AI goals appeared first on Business Insider.

Sam Alito shredded by analyst for ‘placating man-baby’ Trump in major Supreme Court case
News

Sam Alito shredded by analyst for ‘placating man-baby’ Trump in major Supreme Court case

by Raw Story
March 25, 2026

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito drew sharp criticism from legal analyst Elie Mystal on Tuesday after suggesting the Supreme Court ...

Read more
News

United is rolling out beds in economy. Here’s how the airline’s new ‘Relax Row’ will work.

March 25, 2026
News

Vance to attend billionaire-hosted fundraisers amid price-of-living crisis

March 25, 2026
News

Experts fume at Trump after  human rights advocate condemned to ‘civil death’

March 25, 2026
News

Iran Signals Resilience With Volley of Missiles Across Middle East

March 25, 2026
OpenAI’s Sora decision is all about AI compute

OpenAI’s Sora decision is all about AI compute

March 25, 2026
Trump sneers at his loyalists and profits from their losses: analysis

Trump sneers at his loyalists and profits from their losses: analysis

March 25, 2026
Iran Says ‘Non-Hostile’ Ships Can Sail Through the Strait of Hormuz

Iran Says ‘Non-Hostile’ Ships Can Sail Through the Strait of Hormuz

March 25, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026