Hollywood Studios Reject OpenAI’s Sora AI Video Tool
Major Hollywood studios and talent agencies are mounting strong opposition against OpenAI’s Sora 2, the AI video generation platform that gained over 1 million downloads within a week of launch.
Key Takeaways
- Disney, Warner Bros., and Universal are legally challenging OpenAI’s Sora 2
- Talent agencies call the platform a “significant risk” to creator rights
- OpenAI is scrambling to implement stricter content controls
- The app’s rating has plummeted to 2.9 stars amid user backlash
Studios Take Legal Stand Against AI
Disney has formally opted out of having its copyrighted material appear on Sora 2, explicitly stating it never authorized OpenAI to use its characters. The entertainment giant emphasized it has no obligation to “opt-out” under existing copyright law.
Warner Bros. and Universal have taken similar legal positions, building on their previous lawsuits against AI image generator Midjourney for copyright infringement earlier this year.
Talent Agencies Demand Fair Compensation
The Creative Artists Agency (CAA), representing stars including Scarlett Johansson and Tom Hanks, labeled Sora 2 a “significant risk” to intellectual property rights.
“Does OpenAI believe that humans, writers, artists, actors, directors, producers, musicians, and athletes deserve to be compensated and credited for the work they create?” CAA questioned in their official statement.
United Talent Agency echoed these concerns, characterizing Sora’s approach as “exploitation, not innovation.”
Controversial Opt-Out System Sparks Backlash
The conflict centers on Sora 2’s initial “opt-out” approach, which permitted users to generate videos featuring copyrighted characters unless rights holders specifically requested removal. This led to viral clips depicting everything from SpongeBob SquarePants in inappropriate scenarios to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman interacting with Pikachu.
OpenAI Implements Emergency Changes
Under mounting pressure, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced the company would provide rights holders with “more granular control over generation of characters” and implement stricter content restrictions.
The Motion Picture Association has urged OpenAI to take “immediate and decisive action” to prevent further copyright infringement.
Significant Fallout Already Evident
The controversy has taken a measurable toll on Sora 2’s reputation, with the app’s rating dropping to 2.9 stars on Apple’s App Store as users express frustration with the new limitations.
Entertainment companies have established successful legal precedents against AI platforms previously, suggesting OpenAI’s ask-for-forgiveness-later strategy could result in substantial legal consequences.



