Zootopia is one of the properties included in Disney's billion-dollar licensing deal with OpenAI.

Zootopia is one of the properties included in Disney’s billion-dollar licensing deal with OpenAI.

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Disney

If you’ve ever wanted to conjure up a scenario between yourself, Han Solo and the crew from Zootopia, you’re in luck.

The Walt Disney Company has reached a licensing agreement with OpenAI that brings Disney characters and images to Sora, the artificial intelligence company’s short-form-video generator. According to a joint statement released by the two companies, the three-year licensing agreement will allow people to create and share videos using “more than 200” animated characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars.

In an earnings call on Nov. 13, Disney CEO Bob Iger hinted at working with AI companies to create user-generated content on Disney+ to increase engagement with subscribers. Above, a visitor at Disneyland Paris in 2023.

Notably, the statement adds “the agreement does not include any talent likeness or voices.”

As a part of this agreement, Disney will invest $1 billion into OpenAI and become a “major customer” of the company.

Fairplay, the non-profit advocacy group dedicated to reducing children’s screen time, issued a statement saying the Disney OpenAI agreement “betrays kids.”

Figures from the entertainment industry — including the late Fred Rogers, Tupac Shakur, and Robin Williams — have been digitally recreated using OpenAI’s Sora technology. The app’s ability to do so with ease left many in the industry deeply concerned.

“OpenAI claims children are prohibited from using Sora, yet here they are luring young kids to their platform using some of their favorite characters. Shame on the ‘House of Mouse’ for aiding and abetting OpenAI’s efforts to addict young children to its unsafe platform and products,” the statement reads.

Disney and OpenAI say in their statement that the two companies share a commitment to protecting the rights of creators while “maintaining robust controls to prevent the generation of illegal or harmful content.”

Sora users will be able to take advantage of the agreement starting in 2026.

A collage of screenshots showing a mix of videos, some that are AI-generated and some that are real, including a moose eating popcorn, a car with a cloud of smoke, a cat looking at a snake crawling on a man in bed and a police officer pointing at ICE agents.

Screenshots of AI-generated videos show the moon landing, NPR reporter Geoff Brumfiel on a boat and a dog driving a car.

Online safety experts say something else that is happening may be less obvious but more consequential to the future of the internet: OpenAI has essentially rebranded deepfakes as a light-hearted plaything and recommendation engines are loving it.