A big company called OpenAI made a new computer program that can make realistic videos from just words. They call it Sora. Some people think they used YouTube videos without asking to teach Sora how to make videos. The boss of YouTube said that would be wrong and against their rules. Read from source...
- The title is misleading and sensationalized. It implies that YouTube CEO is warning OpenAI about using creators' hard work to train Sora, but in reality, he is just stating the existing terms of service and contracts that govern how YouTube content can be used by third parties.
- The article contradicts itself by saying that OpenAI CTO Mira Murati expressed uncertainty about the use of publicly available YouTube content in training their AI model, Sora, but then quotes her as saying "If they were publicly available to use, there might be data [used]. But I'm not sure, I'm not confident about it". This is a weak and vague statement that does not clearly deny or confirm the use of YouTube content.
- The article uses emotional language such as "violation", "controversial", "accusations" to create a negative tone and appeal to the readers' emotions, rather than presenting factual information and logical arguments.
- The article mentions Elon Musk's public spat with OpenAI as a side note, without explaining what it is about or why it matters. This creates confusion and distracts from the main topic of the article.