# Open-Source İlgili Makaleler

HTX Haber Merkezi, kripto endüstrisindeki piyasa trendleri, proje güncellemeleri, teknoloji gelişmeleri ve düzenleyici politikaları kapsayan "Open-Source" hakkında en son makaleleri ve derinlemesine analizleri sunmaktadır.

5.4 Billion Burned, Sora Dies: Anonymous Chinese Model Kicks Open the Next Door in 38 Seconds

In March-April 2026, two major events reshaped the AI video generation landscape. OpenAI shut down its flagship model Sora, citing unsustainable daily costs of $15 million and low user retention, effectively exiting the consumer video market. Shortly after, an anonymous Chinese model dubbed "HappyHorse-1.0" topped the blind-test leaderboard on Artificial Analysis with a score of 1357 in text-to-video (without audio), outperforming rivals like ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0. HappyHorse-1.4 seconds to generate 1080p video with audio on a single H100 GPU. Its unified Transformer architecture and distilled diffusion techniques significantly improved efficiency compared to Sora’s costly diffusion-based approach. The model is speculated to be developed by Alibaba or based on Sand.ai’s technology, though its anonymous release suggests strategic data collection and legal risk avoidance regarding copyright and deepfake regulations. Meanwhile, commercial leaders like ByteDance impose high barriers—including million-dollar API contracts and strict compliance checks—to mitigate legal risks, focusing on B2B applications rather than consumer use. Key emerging opportunities include automated e-commerce promo videos, AI-assisted short drama production, and localized ad creation for global markets, all driven by plunging generation costs and faster turnaround times. The competition has shifted from pure model performance to cost efficiency, workflow integration, and regulatory compliance.

marsbit04/10 00:19

5.4 Billion Burned, Sora Dies: Anonymous Chinese Model Kicks Open the Next Door in 38 Seconds

marsbit04/10 00:19

Deep Reflections Behind the OP Plunge

In a significant move, Coinbase's Base announced its departure from the Optimism OP Stack to develop its own proprietary unified architecture, causing a sharp 20% drop in $OP’s price. This event highlights the ongoing debate between two competing economic models for blockchain infrastructure: Optimism’s fully open-source, MIT-licensed approach versus Arbitrum’s “community source” model, which mandates a 10% protocol income contribution from chains built on its Orbit stack that settle outside the Arbitrum ecosystem. Optimism’s strategy emphasizes openness and network effects, attracting major projects like Base, Worldcoin, and Uniswap with its modular, permission-free stack. However, this model risks ecosystem fragmentation, as high-value chains may eventually choose independence. In contrast, Arbitrum enforces economic alignment through its revenue-sharing requirement, aiming for long-term sustainability, though it may slow initial adoption. This tension mirrors historical open-source dilemmas, such as those seen with Linux, MySQL, and WordPress, where balancing free access with sustainable funding remains challenging. In crypto, the presence of native tokens amplifies these dynamics, making economic alignment and infrastructure financing even more critical. Neither model is perfect—each involves trade-offs between growth and sustainability. The key takeaway is the need for a broader ecosystem discussion on how to fund and maintain essential public infrastructure without relying on free-riders. Base’s exit should serve as a catalyst for this conversation.

marsbit02/22 09:27

Deep Reflections Behind the OP Plunge

marsbit02/22 09:27

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