Initial release The team that developed Sora named it after the Japanese word for 'sky' to signify its "limitless creative potential". On February 15, 2024, OpenAI first previewed Sora by releasing multiple clips of
high-definition videos that it had created, including an
SUV driving down a mountain road, an animation of a "short fluffy monster" next to a candle, two people walking through
Tokyo in the snow, and fake historical footage of the
California gold rush. OpenAI stated that it was able to generate videos as long as one minute. In February 2025, OpenAI announced plans to integrate Sora into ChatGPT by letting users generate Sora videos from the
chatbot.
Sora 2 Sora 2 was unveiled on September 30, 2025, with an
iOS app at the same time, as well as an
Android app two months later. All videos generated by the model feature a visible, moving
watermark to prevent
misuse of the tool. The previous version of Sora also added a safety watermark to allow viewers to distinguish between real and fictional content. On October 7,
404 Media reported that third-party programs that could remove the watermark from Sora 2 videos had become prevalent. Many outlets, such as
Wired magazine, have noted that the Sora 2 app is overtly similar to
TikTok in style and features.
Discontinuation On March 24, 2026, OpenAI announced on
X that it was discontinuing Sora in both the mobile app and the API. The Sora app was shut down on April 26, 2026, while the API is planned to be shut down on September 24, 2026. OpenAI's partnership with
Disney, which included a
licensing agreement allowing Disney characters to be used within Sora, was also coming to an end. The decision prompted British technology news website
The Register to label OpenAI a "product-killer", following in the footsteps of other technology companies such as
Google,
Amazon Web Services,
Broadcom,
Cloud Software Group, and
Netscape. OpenAI did not provide a specific reason for discontinuing Sora in its shutdown notice. The reports that emerged regarding this discontinuity linked the decision to computation shortages, cost pressures, and a broader shift toward core enterprise products. Following its public launch, Sora's worldwide users peaked at around a million before declining to fewer than 500,000, while the service cost an estimated $1 million per day to operate due to the computational demands of video generation. == Legal regulation ==