In recent days, there has been a short play on the Internet called “The Hegemon CEO falls in love with a gynecologist.”
Unlike the past short play posters, which contained information about products, productions, actors, etc., the posters in the video showed only the title and date of 30 October and nothing else.
The nine people in the video shouted, “The Hegemonic President is in love with a gynecologist.”
As can be seen in a lot of detail, this is an AI-generated video.
The first was when the male leadman was close to the camera, the mouth muscle line was rigid, and when he spoke, the mouth was framed. Second, the behaviour of others in the video was also unnatural, with no artificial injections being required.

Most importantly, it is clearly not a routine opening ceremony, and it is a hoax for AI.
It’s not just this bad video, but it’s a similar video produced by Sora, which is the same thing as “The Hegemonic President loves Me.”
These seemingly realistic, but unrealistic, videos, actually produced by the OpenAI Sora2 model, also drive Sora App to be at the top of the free application list for more than a dozen days, with less than five days of downloads exceeding a million times, even at a faster rate than ChatGPT. Even though competitor Google launched its new video model Veo 3.1 last week, its related AI application Gemini is currently after Sora, ChatGPT.
When the combination of the AI tools has become a web-hot master, the Internet has become increasingly deviant, using this extremely eccentric approach to reverse-trading traffic.
For centuries, the traditional understanding of humanity has been “hearing and hearing and seeing”, that is, “the second-hand message is false and the first-hand information is true”. Today, however, this recognition has been greatly challenged and even subverted in the AI era. As AI technology continues to evolve, such content becomes more and more authentic and easy to use, and the human eye and ears are no longer able to discern the authenticity of first-hand information.
When the user first logs in Sora App, you see a hint: You’re about to enter the creative world built on AI-generated content. Sora reminds users that, while some videos appear to know people, their behaviour and events are not real.

On Sora App, one can still realize that everything is AI-generated. But as these elements flow from Sora to other social platforms, they gradually mix with real video, making it hard to tell.
