December 11, 2025

Credit: Robert Way/Shutterstock
Key Takeaways
- OpenAI announced a partnership with Disney on Thursday that will let Sora users generate videos featuring more than 200 Disney characters.
- Sora users will be able to make videos featuring characters like Mickey Mouse, Luke Skywalker, and Mufasa, without any copyright infringement.
- Sora users have already made fake Disney videos that are wildly offensive, and this may only add fuel to the fire.
Table of Contents
If you’ve engaged in any sort of doomscrolling over the past year, you’ve no doubt encountered some wild AI-generated content. While there are plenty of AI v…
December 11, 2025

Credit: Robert Way/Shutterstock
Key Takeaways
- OpenAI announced a partnership with Disney on Thursday that will let Sora users generate videos featuring more than 200 Disney characters.
- Sora users will be able to make videos featuring characters like Mickey Mouse, Luke Skywalker, and Mufasa, without any copyright infringement.
- Sora users have already made fake Disney videos that are wildly offensive, and this may only add fuel to the fire.
Table of Contents
If you’ve engaged in any sort of doomscrolling over the past year, you’ve no doubt encountered some wild AI-generated content. While there are plenty of AI video generators out there producing this stuff, one of the most prevalent is OpenAI’s Sora, which is particularly adept at generating realistic short-form videos mimicking the content you might find on TikTok or Instagram Reels. These videos can be so convincing at first glance, that people often don’t realize what they’re seeing is 100% fake. That can be harmless when it’s videos of cats playing instruments at midnight, but dangerous when impersonating real people or properties.
It’s that last point that I thought would offer some pushback to AI’s seemingly exponential growth. These companies have trained their AI models on huge amounts of data, much of which is copyrighted, which means that people are able to generate images and videos of iconic characters like Pikachu, Superman, and Darth Vader. The big AI generators put guardrails on their platforms to try to prevent videos that infringe on copyright, but people find a way around them. As such, corporations have already started suing OpenAI, Google, and other AI companies over this blatant IP theft. (Disclosure: Lifehacker’s parent company, Ziff Davis, filed a lawsuit against OpenAI in April 2025, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)
Disney is handing its characters over to Sora users
But it seems not all companies want to go down this path. Take Disney, as a prime example. On Thursday, OpenAI announced that it had made a three-year licensing agreement with the company behind Mickey Mouse. As part of the deal, Sora users can now generate videos featuring over 200 Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars characters. The announcement names the following characters and movies specifically:
Mickey Mouse
Minnie Mouse
Lilo
Stitch
Ariel
Belle
Beast
Cinderella
Baymax
Simba
Mufasa
Black Panther
Captain America
Deadpool
Groot
Iron Man
Loki
Thor
Thanos
Darth Vader
Han Solo
Luke Skywalker
Leia
The Mandalorian
Stormtroopers
Yoda
Encanto
Frozen
Inside Out
Moana
Monsters Inc.
Toy Story
Up
Zootopia
That includes licensed costumes, props, vehicles, and environments. What’s more, Disney+ will host a "selection" of these "fan-inspired" Sora videos. (I’ll admit, that last point genuinely shocks me.) This does only apply to Disney’s visual assets, however, as Sora users won’t have access to voice acting. ChatGPT users will also be able to generate images with these characters, so this news doesn’t just affect Sora users.
You might think OpenAI is paying Disney a hefty licensing fee here, but it appears to be quite the opposite. Not only is Disney pledging to use OpenAI APIs to build "products, tools, and experiences," it is rolling out ChatGPT to its employees as well. Oh, and the company is making a $1 billion equity investment in OpenAI. (Is that all?)
What do you think so far?
I know many companies are embracing AI, often in ways I disagree with. But this deal is something else entirely. I’m not sure any Disney executives actually searched for "Sora Disney" on the internet, because right now, you’ll find fake AI trailers for Pixar movies filled with racism, sexual content, and generally offensive content—*all generated using an app Disney just licensed all of its properties to. *OpenAI asserts in its announcement that both companies are committed to preventing "illegal or harmful" content on the platform, but Sora users are already creating harmful content. What kind of content can we expect with carte blanch access to Disney’s properties?
Now that Disney’s characters are fair game, I can’t imagine the absolute slop that some users are going to make here. The only hope I have is in the fact that Disney+ is going to host some of these videos. Staff will have to weed through some garbage to find videos that are actually suitable for the platform. And maybe seeing the "content" that Sora users like to make with iconic characters will be enough for Disney to rethink its plans.
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Jake Peterson
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