Disney Exits OpenAI Deal After AI Giant Shutters Sora

The studio giant will no longer move forward with its OpenAI investment, as the AI company exits the video generation business.

The Hollywood Reporter

"Disney is also exiting the deal it signed with OpenAI last year, in which it pledged to invest $1 billion in the company and agreed to license some of its characters for use in Sora."

Realized that mickey mouse porn wasn't good for their image huh.

Oh, per -this- story, apparently openai fucked -themselves- by shuttering the service without notifying Disney about it?

lol, wow, that's a -huge- fuckup.

https://www.reuters.com/technology/openai-set-discontinue-sora-video-platform-app-wsj-reports-2026-03-24/

That's gonna make all their other "partners" second-guess their relationship, if openai's so chaotic as to randomly shut down essential parts of such partnerships without warning.

Anyone doing even the -slightest- amount of due diligence should disqualify openai from consideration from this alone - a billion dollars in cash -and- access to a treasure-trove of licensing? that they just randomly drop on the floor because they're pivoting to a "super app" that nobody's going to want?

That's not the hallmark of a serious business in the slightest.

"OpenAI executives are now focusing on other research areas, including robotics and building artificial general intelligence."

So, things that need massive investments in hardware and things that are not possible with this tech. Got it.

@munin I don't think the geniuses chasing AGI right now are actually intelligent enough to realize just how far we are from functional conscious thought or even a generalized "intelligence" they're drooling for.

I'm not an expert and just the math about paths of neurons firing and how memories are stored (assuming we mimic what we know about consciousness, that is...)?

We're nowhere remotely near any sort of consciousness.

@munin and research into AGI may be worthy, but this isn't research and they're not even trying to hide that.

@NosirrahSec

I don't think it's worthwhile as an avenue myself, but then I prefer fixing real problems that exist now, like "dependency management"