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Android Users can now use the new Sora mobile app. OpenAI, the creator of the artificial intelligence-based social media app, announced on Tuesday that it will launch an Android version of its popular app. Previously, Android users were stuck using Sora through a web browser.
You can download Sora now on Google Play Store And start scrolling right away. No longer needed Sora invitation code.
This is just one of many updates that OpenAI has dropped in recent weeks. In a new post, OpenAI President Bill Peebles explained to Sora What’s coming soon to AI-video, including new creation tools, enhanced social features, and long-awaited Android support. OpenAI also said it would be Working with unions like SAG-AFTRA and other celebrities and public figures to help moderate the creation of potentially inappropriate or illegal videos, including deepfake videos.
Here’s everything inside the Sora app. For more, check out our guide to How to detect videos generated by artificial intelligence.
Sora recently gained new creation tools in the form of portraits, which is now expanding beyond people. Cameo is Sora’s main feature that lets you use other people’s photos to create almost any type of AI-powered video. Soon, you’ll be able to show off your dog, guinea pig, favorite stuffed toy, or characters created from existing Sora videos. There were a number of Halloween themed characters Recently added.
The app’s creation interface will also highlight trending cameos in real-time, likely drawing on existing popular social media features such as the For You page or the Explore page on Instagram.
OpenAI also adds basic video editing tools, starting with the ability to stitch clips together directly in the app. More advanced editing features are on the way, Peebles says, pointing to a broader creative suite that aims to move Sora beyond short, one-off generations to an app that can be used by professional creators.
On the social side, the team is experimenting with new ways to use Sora with friends and communities, rather than just a global feed. This could mean creating channels for your university, workplace, hobbies, or sports teams, bringing a more local flair to what has until now been a mostly chaotic public stream of AI videos.
These changes follow Sora’s first major update earlier this month, which introduced longer video borders and a storyboard feature. The company announced that free Sora users can create videos up to 15 seconds long on the iPhone app and web (which is the only way Android users can use Sora at the moment). Pro users also get an additional 10 seconds when they create for the web, for a total of 25 seconds. The announcement came one day after Google It has upgraded the popular AI video model,Veo 3, to handle longer video generations.
As OpenAI has been adding new features and opening up its app to anyone (No invitation code needed), it was Add payment plans. Previously, free users could create up to 30 videos per day, with Pro users capped at 100 videos per day. Now, if anyone reaches their generation limit, they can pay $4 for 10 additional video generations.
Since your Sora account is linked to your ChatGPT account, if you are paying for ChatGPT Pro, you are a paying Sora user. (For more information, see all Payment plans.)
Storyboard, available only to professional web users, allows content creators to plan web videos before creating them. Storyboarding has long been part of the professional filmmaking process and is sometimes included in more professional programs. Google Flow AI movie making softwareFor example, comics are allowed. But this is an interesting and somewhat unexpected addition for Sora.
Sora has only been around for a short time, but the vibe of the app is focused on shorter, funny videos, reflecting OpenAI’s claim that the app is designed to help people connect with their friends. Longer, better-planned professional videos aren’t very popular, but these upcoming updates will likely change that. This may be a sign that OpenAI hopes to attract professional creators it had previously isolated. Professional creators will need storyboarding, video editing, longer runtimes and higher resolution, and OpenAI seems to be handling these quickly.
(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that it infringed Ziff Davis’s copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)