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Disturbing video reveals shocking flaw in Open AI video generator

Let's talk about stretching.

OpenAI's generative artificial intelligence video maker puts a twist on techies after a tool named Sora created a creepy clip of gymnasts contorting their bodies in a series of surprising and completely unnatural movements. I am.

The unsettling visual, requested by a Sora user via text prompt, showed a dancer spinning around precariously while performing one near-impossible stunt after another.

A bizarre AI-generated video of a gymnast shows some very disturbing and bizarre movements. Dee Dee/X

At times, bodies appeared to be flying away, giving the impression that an exorcism was being performed.

Critics were quick to point out that the breakthrough AI had yet to pass the “Turing test.” The Turing Test is a term used to describe how machines exhibit human-like intelligence, or lack thereof.

In the video, the woman's face was sometimes replaced by a third leg. Dee Dee/X

The fintech worker who created the video said in X AI gymnastics videos now have a wide range of motion capture, which has become a barometer for how successful homemade footage will be.

“I've been playing with text-to-video models for the past six months, and I knew they struggled with complex physical movements, like gymnastics,” he said online. So this man known as Deedy Das. told Ars Technica.

User X shared other videos of AI gymnastics stunts. It looked like it was split into two people. In points.

Still, he noted, these current clips are still there. much more sophisticated More than what AI could do on this subject six months ago.

“Overall it's improved. Previously… gymnasts would just teleport or change costumes during flips, and overall it still looked downright scary. AI video now defaults to physical I was hoping that he would learn the sciences, but that hasn't happened yet.”

Experts say gymnastics videos will be the ultimate test for generated AI videos. AP

Others recognized that generative AI also has a very hard time copying language and still has a lot to learn about how humans work.

“Watching Sora struggle with basic physics shows you that in order to do real-life simulations, you need to actually understand it first,” one user commented.

“We're discovering that 'common sense' is anything but common. It's one of the hardest things to code.”

In a recent robot-related failure, Coca-Cola recently came under fire for the quality of its AI-powered holiday commercial.

Some people have recently had unpleasant interactions with large language model chatbots.

Google's program went out of control, telling users to die and telling other users to eat rocks to get nourishment.

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