yahoo news | The Sora Embarrassment is a Reflection of OpenAI's Juvenile CultureSam Altman’s Sora was billed as an affordable AI video app that let users upload a likeness for $20 a month and generate quirky clips—think a cartoon version of yourself shoplifting at Home Depot or arguing with a cat at a restaurant. While the novelty sparked a flood of meme‑filled videos on social media, the service was financially disastrous: it burned roughly $15 million a day for OpenAI yet only returned $1.4 million in revenue, and downloads have dropped 75 percent since its October launch.The failure of Sora also casts doubt on similar ventures such as Google’s Veo and ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0. Both companies are pouring comparable sums into AI‑generated video, but the market appears unable to sustain such costly, low‑margin products. Even occasional social‑media successes—like the “Chloe vs History” Instagram account—cannot offset the operating expenses, prompting questions about how long these tech giants will keep loss‑making video generators alive.Beyond video, Sora’s demise highlights a broader malaise at OpenAI. Competing products like Anthropic’s Claude Code are siphoning users from OpenAI’s Codex, and flagship offerings such as ChatGPT have been dropped by major partners like Walmart. Altman’s newest “Spud” model is touted as a game‑changer, yet it sounds as frivolous as the teenage‑ish culture that produced Sora. If AI video cannot find a viable use case, the industry may face a similar collapse, undermining the optimism that AI will prop up the U.S. economy.Read more: https://petapixel.com/2026/03/26/the-sora-embarrassment-is-a-reflection-of-openais-juvenile-culture/#samaltman #sora #openai #anthropic