As Google’s video creation model ‘Veo 2’ was distributed to some testers, direct comparison with Open AI ‘Sora’ began. The outcomes of making videos using the identical prompt are overwhelmingly evaluated as superior.
Business Insider reported on the nineteenth (local time) that users of Google’s Vio 2 are releasing comparison videos on social media one after one other showing that it outperforms Sora.
In fact, Sora is currently being officially released, and Bio 2 is being tested for some people starting on the sixteenth. Through the Sora test period, only good results were disclosed, so no problems were revealed.
It’s difficult to view this as an objective comparison since the video released this time can have been chosen.
Nevertheless, the video released by some testers shows an incredibly large difference. Quite than saying that Bio 2 was ahead, it was highlighted that Sora was poor at reflecting physical laws.
Among the many videos released by TED host Bilawal Sidhu on Twitter, there may be a scene of individuals eating soup, but whatever the quality, Sora created a bizarre video.
Also, within the video posted by Ruben Hasid, founding father of Easyzen, he’s seen cutting a tomato with a knife, while Sora’s video shows him cutting his finger with a knife. The videos are all the results of entering the identical prompt.
“After hours of testing Sora and Vio 2, we concluded that while Sora has a robust motion bias, Vio 2 has superior accuracy and physical realism,” said Andreessen Horowitz Partner Justin Moore.
Some even said that this difference was because Google learned Vio 2 from YouTube. Sora was also known to have used YouTube, nevertheless it was said that the model was re-trained from scratch ahead of the official launch.
The evaluation is that Sora’s learning will not be sufficient in comparison with Google’s in the method.
It’s because Google sent a warning message to Open AI. Last April, when suspicions arose that OpenAI had learned from YouTube, YouTube CEO Neil Mohan and Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in succession, “If there may be an issue, we are going to respond in response to policy.”
Reporter Lim Da-jun ydj@aitimes.com