Comment by throwaway314155
2 days ago
Says it's open source but I'm having trouble finding a link to weights and/or code?
Looks incredibly impressive btw. Not sure it's wise to call it `AniSora` but I don't really know.
2 days ago
Says it's open source but I'm having trouble finding a link to weights and/or code?
Looks incredibly impressive btw. Not sure it's wise to call it `AniSora` but I don't really know.
https://huggingface.co/IndexTeam/Index-anisora
Thanks!
> This model has 1 file scanned as unsafe. testvl-pre76-top187-rec69.pth
Hm, perhaps I'll wait for this to get cleared up?
Disty of SD.Next has made a version in diffusers format.
https://huggingface.co/Disty0/Index-anisora-5B-diffusers
For the record, the dev branch of SD.Next (https://github.com/vladmandic/sdnext) already supports it.
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I wonder if the entropy of model weights and their size causes statistical false positives to appear often?
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This is not the first time I've heard of checkpoints being used to distribute malware. In fact, I've heard this was a popular vector from shady international groups.
I wouldn't expect this from Bilibili's Index Team, though, given how high profile they are. It's probably(?) a false positive. Though I wouldn't use it personally, just to be safe.
The safetensors format should be used by everyone. Raw pth files and pickle files should be shunned and abandoned by the industry. It's a bad format.
> Not sure it's wise to call it `AniSora` but I don't really know.
Given that OpenAI call themselves "Open", I think it's great and hilarious that we're reusing their names.
There was OpenSora from around this time last year:
https://github.com/hpcaitech/Open-Sora
And there are a lot of other products calling themselves "Sora" as well.
It's also interesting to note that OpenAI recently redirected sora.com, which used to be its own domain, to sora.chatgpt.com.
> OpenAI recently redirected sora.com, which used to be its own domain, to sora.chatgpt.com.
Probably to share cookies.
Cookies are such a mess.
We need cross-domain cookies. Google took them away so they could further entrench their analytics and ads platform. Abuse of monopoly power.
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