AI Developments See Mixed Reactions: Google Opens Genie, Sora Struggles, and Anthropic Faces Copyright Lawsuit
Google DeepMind began offering access to its AI world generator, Project Genie, to Google AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S. on Thursday, while OpenAI's video-generation app Sora experienced a decline in downloads and consumer spending after a strong initial launch. Meanwhile, music publishers sued Anthropic for alleged copyright infringement of over 20,000 songs, seeking $3 billion in damages.
Project Genie, powered by Google's Genie 3, Nano Banana Pro, and Gemini, allows users to create interactive game worlds from text prompts or images, according to TechCrunch. This move, five months after Genie 3's research preview, aims to gather user feedback and training data for developing more capable world models. World models are AI systems that generate an internal representation of an environment, predicting future outcomes and planning actions.
In contrast, OpenAI's Sora app, powered by the Sora 2 video generation model, saw a decline after initially topping the App Store in October. Despite achieving over 100,000 installs on its first day and quickly reaching 1 million downloads, data from Appfigures indicated a decrease in app downloads and consumer spending. The iOS-only, invite-only app had initially surpassed even ChatGPT in download speed.
Anthropic faced legal challenges as a cohort of music publishers, including Concord Music Group and Universal Music Group, filed a lawsuit alleging "flagrant piracy" of over 20,000 copyrighted songs. The publishers claimed Anthropic illegally downloaded sheet music, song lyrics, and musical compositions. The lawsuit, seeking damages potentially exceeding $3 billion, was filed by the same legal team involved in the Bartz v. Anthropic case, where authors accused the AI company of using their copyrighted works to train models like Claude. While Judge William Alsup ruled that training AI models on copyrighted content is legal, the publishers are proceeding with their case.
The developments in AI come as a Game Developers Conference survey revealed that 52 percent of developers believe generative AI is bad for the gaming industry, according to The Verge. Despite the adoption of generative AI in game development, a significant portion of developers expressed concerns about the technology's impact.
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