OpenAI Kills Sora: The $1M-a-Day Distraction Doomed by Reality
OpenAI's Sora promised Hollywood magic — then vanished in six months. Turns out, it wasn't spies or scandals: just brutal economics forcing a ruthless refocus.
OpenAI's Sora promised Hollywood magic — then vanished in six months. Turns out, it wasn't spies or scandals: just brutal economics forcing a ruthless refocus.
Sora's done. OpenAI's pulling the plug on its AI video star to laser in on bigger battles—like cracking general intelligence.
OpenAI's Sora was the shiny video toy everyone craved. Now it's gone, even as VCs bet billions on AI's future. Reality's biting back—hard.
OpenAI torched its Sora video app Tuesday, citing compute overload and brutal competition. But the real story? A frantic scramble for profits as rivals eat their lunch.
OpenAI's Sora video tool? Gone from public view overnight. It's the latest sign AI's grand promises are slamming into infrastructure walls and legal landmines.
OpenAI's Sora shutdown isn't failure—it's focus. But it exposes AI video's consumer flop and enterprise pivot.
Everyone buzzed for OpenAI's AI TikTok. Six months later, it's toast. Here's why this deepfake disaster signals bigger shifts in AI's consumer ambitions.
Picture this: dogs behind the wheel, Princess Diana flipping over rooftops — all conjured by AI in seconds. Then, poof. OpenAI shutters Sora overnight.
Sam Altman's email lands like a thud: Sora's gone. The AI video darling that dazzled with Disney dreams? Poof — just six months later.
OpenAI didn't just upgrade video gen—they built a physics engine from data. Here's why this changes everything from games to robots.