OpenAI sunsets Sora app after 6 months of scrutiny

The Sora app is being shut down as OpenAI reshapes its approach to AI video tools and platform integration.

Sora logo over a stylised sunset background illustrating OpenAI's reported shutdown of the standalone video app

OpenAI is moving to shut down the Sora app, its consumer-facing AI video platform, according to an official X post on 24 March. The move follows months of scrutiny around AI-generated video, including concerns over deepfakes, copyright, and harmful synthetic media.

The reported shutdown comes shortly after OpenAI retired Sora 1 in the United States on 13 March 2026 and replaced it with Sora 2 as the default experience. OpenAI’s help documentation says the older version remains available only in countries where the newer one has not yet launched, while support pages for the standalone Sora app are still live. The product changes also follow the announcement of new copyright settings for the latest video generation model.

That makes the current picture more complex than a simple sunset. Public OpenAI help pages still describe tools on iOS, Android, and the web, while news reports say the company has now decided to wind down the app itself. OpenAI had also recently indicated that it plans to integrate Sora video generation into ChatGPT, which could help explain why the standalone product is being reconsidered.

Sora became one of OpenAI’s most visible consumer media products, but it also drew sustained scrutiny over deepfakes, non-consensual content, and copyrighted characters. Such concerns remained central even as OpenAI added additional controls to the platform, including new consent and traceability measures to enhance AI video safety. AP reported that pressure from advocacy groups, scholars, and entertainment-sector voices formed part of the backdrop to the shutdown decision.

For users, the immediate issue is preservation of existing content. OpenAI’s Sora 1 sunset FAQ says some legacy material may be exportable for a limited period before deletion, but the company has not yet published a detailed standalone help document explaining the full shutdown. Based on the information now available, the clearest distinction is that OpenAI first retired one legacy version in some markets and is now reportedly ending the standalone app more broadly.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech, and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!