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Trump unveils fast-track visas for World Cup ticket holders
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Netherlands qualify for World Cup, Poland in play-offs
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Germany crush Slovakia to qualify for 2026 World Cup
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'In it to win it': Australia doubles down on climate hosting bid
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Former NFL star Brown could face 30 yrs jail for shooting case: prosecutor
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Fate of Canada government hinges on tight budget vote
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New research measures how much plastic is lethal for marine life
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Mbappe, PSG face off in multi-million lawsuit
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EU defends carbon tax as ministers take over COP30 negotiations
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McCartney to release silent AI protest song
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Louvre shuts gallery over ceiling safety fears
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'Stranded, stressed' giraffes in Kenya relocated as habitats encroached
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US Supreme Court to hear migrant asylum claim case
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Western aid cuts could cause 22.6 million deaths, researchers say
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Clarke hails Scotland 'legends' ahead of crunch World Cup qualifier
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S.Africa says 'suspicious' flights from Israel show 'agenda to cleanse Palestinians'
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South Korea pledges to phase out coal plants at COP30
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Ex-PSG footballer Hamraoui claims 3.5m euros damages against club
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Mbappe, PSG in counterclaims worth hundreds of millions
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Two newly discovered Bach organ works unveiled in Germany
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Stocks lower on uncertainty over earnings, tech rally, US rates
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Barca to make long-awaited Camp Nou return on November 22
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COP30 talks enter homestretch with UN warning against 'stonewalling'
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France makes 'historic' accord to sell Ukraine 100 warplanes
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Delhi car bombing accused appears in Indian court, another suspect held
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Emirates orders 65 more Boeing 777X planes despite delays
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Ex-champion Joshua to fight YouTube star Jake Paul
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Bangladesh court sentences ex-PM to be hanged for crimes against humanity
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Trade tensions force EU to cut 2026 eurozone growth forecast
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'Killed without knowing why': Sudanese exiles relive Darfur's past
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Stocks lower on uncertainty over tech rally, US rates
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Death toll from Indonesia landslides rises to 18
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Macron, Zelensky sign accord for Ukraine to buy French fighter jets
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India Delhi car bomb accused appears in court
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Bangladesh ex-PM sentenced to be hanged for crimes against humanity
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Leftist, far-right candidates advance to Chilean presidential run-off
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Bangladesh's Hasina: from PM to crimes against humanity convict
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Rugby chiefs unveil 'watershed' Nations Championship
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EU predicts less eurozone 2026 growth due to trade tensions
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Swiss growth suffered from US tariffs in Q3: data
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Bangladesh ex-PM sentenced to death for crimes against humanity
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Singapore jails 'attention seeking' Australian over Ariana Grande incident
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Tom Cruise receives honorary Oscar for illustrious career
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Fury in China over Japan PM's Taiwan comments
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Carbon capture promoters turn up in numbers at COP30: NGO
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Japan-China spat over Taiwan comments sinks tourism stocks
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No Wemby, no Castle, no problem as NBA Spurs rip Kings
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In reversal, Trump supports House vote to release Epstein files
'It's frightening': YouTubers split over OpenAI's video tool Sora
US firm OpenAI debuted a tool last week that can generate highly realistic snippets of video from just a few lines of text, leading content creators to wonder if they are the latest professionals about to be replaced by algorithms.
Reactions to the tool, called Sora, have ranged from head-over-heels enthusiasm to alarm over the future direction of the industry.
YouTuber Marques Brownlee called it "frightening" and "threatening" to see an AI doing his job.
On the other hand, Caleb Ward, one half of AI filmmaking duo Curious Refuge, told his YouTube followers he could not wait to get his hands on the tool.
Yet both Ward and Brownlee agreed that it was a massive moment for their industry.
"I can't stress enough how big a deal this is for the filmmaking and creative world," said Ward, who recently went viral with a trailer he created for a Wes Anderson-style Star Wars movie.
OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, said in its announcement that Sora was not yet available to the public.
The announcement did not specify use cases but said "a number of visual artists, designers and filmmakers" had been chosen to help test it.
- 'Like an amoeba' -
The firm accompanied its statement with sample videos including a stylish woman walking along a Tokyo street, a cat waking up its owner in bed, and a group of charging woolly mammoths.
The internet immediately lit up with awe and praise, as is common with OpenAI products.
"I was shocked by their quality," Anis Ayari, an AI engineer and streamer known as Defend Intelligence, told AFP.
He suggested the tool could one day be used to create entirely virtual presenters.
But there were also plenty of dissenters who felt the videos were still firmly stuck in the "uncanny valley", where glitches in otherwise photo-realistic images can leave viewers feeling queasy.
Commentator Ed Zitron wrote that in OpenAI's cat video "the owner's arm appears to be part of the cushion and the cat's paw explodes out of its arm like an amoeba".
He wrote in his newsletter that AI video tools were too expensive and resource-hungry to ever be genuinely useful.
And styles of clips could not be harmonised, making the tools useless for creating anything other than tiny snippets.
- AI fatigue -
Sora enters a marketplace that is heating up, with Google, Stability AI and several other smaller players already in the game.
YouTube itself announced last September it was developing a tool to let creators make AI-generated videos and background pictures.
However, the tools already available have hardly taken the world by storm.
French streamer FibreTigre said he had tried AI video tools but ended his experiment.
He said he was worried about the ethics of using tools trained on other artists' work, and ultimately the programs did not do their job well enough.
"They're just ugly," he said of AI videos.
He said he could see a future where viewers would have a "huge amount of fatigue" with AI and would cherish anything that was not artificial.
G.AbuGhazaleh--SF-PST