Japanese publishers like Bandai Namco and Square Enix are requesting Sora 2 is no longer trained on their creative works

Japanese publishers like Bandai Namco and Square Enix are requesting Sora 2 is no longer trained on their creative works

A collection of Japanese publishers including Bandai Namco, Square Enix, and others have come together as part of CODA (Content Overseas Distribution Association) to request Open AI cease training AI video generation tool Sora 2 on their collective creative works.

The statement to Open AI, made public via a statement published on the CODA website, state that CODA, requests that CODA members works are not used for machine learning without prior permission, and that Open AI responds sincerely to claims and inquires from CODA members regarding copyright infringement related to Sora 2’s output.

The statement also mentions Sora 2’s opt out policy, that being that copyrighted works will be used by Sora 2 unless copyright owners specifically opt out themselves. Coda emphasises that this goes against Japanese copyright infringement laws in which permission is required beforehand. Coda also noted that: “there is no system allowing one to avoid liability for infringement through subsequent objections.”

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Coda is a substantial organisation in Japan that is responsible for copyright protection through combating piracy, as well as the legal worldwide distribution of Japanese video games, movies, music, T.V, and animation. It has a wide variety of members, including companies like Bandai Namco, Cygames, Toei, Square Enix, and more.

Coda is among many with serious copyright concerns in regard to AI models such as Sora 2. AI company Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5bn to authors to settle a copyright lawsuit earlier this year, while a wide variety of ongoing lawsuits are currently in the works (all of which can be tracked on this handy Wired article)

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