@kronoGODLY@jupiterwestt@anguts_ Yep, that’s the Sora mark — pretty common lately.
You can remove it easily with https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 or open-source tools on GitHub.
@FollowAurelius@maxescu@higgsfield_ai Nice breakdown.
For watermark removal, in addition to tools like @higgsfield_ai, there’s also https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 — browser-based with daily free credits and it can strip the Sora watermark even from drafts, so you don’t have to publish the video first
@unclgrndpa@jd6249192289491@KunathMMA@Jimbo_J_ You can remove it pretty easily now.
There’s an open-source script if you search “Sora Watermark” on GitHub, or you can just use https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 — it works right in the browser
@Turbotroop_@nachosburner Yeah, once people figured out how Sora’s watermark works, removal became pretty easy.
There are open-source scripts on GitHub (“Sora Watermark”) and even browser tools like https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 that can clean it in seconds — which shows how fragile these watermark protections
@theskeptic_007@mikefutia Totally agree — The funny thing is it’s actually not that hard to remove anymore. You can search “Sora Watermark” on GitHub for open-source options, or just use a web tool like https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 to clean it up in a few seconds.
@loveDoges111 This video isn’t real — it was generated with Sora, OpenAI’s text-to-video model.
It’s very likely that the original Sora watermark was removed with a tool like https://t.co/EQbrML7Zy6 or similar online editors