OpenAI blocks AI videos of Martin Luther King Jr.

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OpenAI blocks MLK Jr. videos on Sora after ‘disrespectful depictions’ October 17, 20252:39 PM ETHeadshot of Bobby Allyn

The families of some deceased celebrities and public figures, including Martin Luther King Jr., have criticized OpenAI for allowing depictions of vulgar, unflattering or incriminating behavior on its Sora app.

The families of some deceased celebrities and public figures, including Martin Luther King Jr., have criticized OpenAI for allowing depictions of vulgar, unflattering or incriminating behavior on its Sora app. Sora/Open AI/Annotation by NPR hide caption

toggle caption Sora/Open AI/Annotation by NPR

OpenAI has blocked users from making videos of Martin Luther King Jr. on its Sora app after the estate of the civil rights leader complained about the spread of “disrespectful depictions.”

Screenshots of AI-generated videos show the moon landing, NPR reporter Geoff Brumfiel on a boat and a dog driving a car.

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Since the company launched Sora three weeks ago, hyper-realistic deepfake videos of King saying crude, offensive or racist things have rocketed across social media, including fake videos of King stealing from a grocery store, speeding away from police and perpetuating racial stereotypes.

Late on Thursday, OpenAI and King’s estate released a joint statement saying AI videos portraying King are being blocked as the company “strengthens guardrails for historical figures.”

OpenAI said it believes there are “strong free speech interests” in allowing users to make AI deepfakes of historical figures, but that estates should have ultimate control over how those likenesses are used.

Sponsor MessageOnline safety experts say something else that is happening may be less obvious but more consequential to the future of the internet: OpenAI has essentially rebranded deepfakes as a light-hearted plaything and recommendation engines are loving it.

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The Sora app, which remains invite-only, has taken a shoot-first, aim-later approach to safety guardrails, which has raised alarms with intellectual property lawyers, public figures and disinformation researchers.

When someone joins the app, they are instructed to record a video of themselves from multiple angles and record themselves speaking. Users can control whether others can make deepfake videos of them, which Sora calls a “cameo.”

But the app allowed people to make videos of many celebrities and historical figures without explicit consent, enabling users to create fake footage of Princess Diana, John F. Kennedy, Kurt Cobain, Malcolm X and many others.

The ability to control how one’s likeness is used does not stop when someone dies. “Right of publicity” laws vary by state, but in California, for instance, heirs to a public figure, or their estate, own the rights to likeness for 70 years after a celebrity’s death.

In the days after the Sora app was released, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced changes to the app providing rights holders the ability to opt into their likenesses being depicted by AI, rather than such portrayals being allowed by default.

Still, the families of some deceased celebrities and public figures have criticized OpenAI for allowing depictions of vulgar, unflattering or incriminating behavior.

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After videos of Robin Williams flooded social media feeds, Zelda Williams, the late actor’s daughter, asked the public to stop making videos of her father. “Please, just stop sending me AI videos of my dad,” she wrote in an Instagram post, adding that “it’s NOT what he’d want.”

Bernice King, the civil rights leader’s daughter, agreed, writing on X: “Please stop.”

OpenAI's logo is on the screen of a mobile phone that's being held in front of a computer screen displaying output from ChatGPT.

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Hollywood studios and talent agencies have also expressed concern that OpenAI unveiled the Sora app without receiving consent from copyright holders.

It’s an approach similar to how the company has developed ChatGPT, which sucked up droves of copyrighted content without approval or payment before eventually striking licensing deals with some publishers. The approach has sparked a wave of copyright lawsuits.

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