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Home»Technology
OpenAI developing new image and video AI models alongside a coding-focused text model

OpenAI Builds New Image, Video, and Coding-Focused Text Model

20 December 2025 Technology No Comments5 Mins Read
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OpenAI is working on multiple new artificial intelligence systems, including an image model, a video model, and a new text-based model designed to better assist with coding, according to information accompanying a newly published image. The effort underscores the company’s continued push to broaden its lineup of multimodal tools—AI systems that can process and generate more than one type of content—while also sharpening its appeal to software developers.

A broader multimodal roadmap comes into focus

Over the past two years, the race to build AI that can fluidly move between text, images, and video has intensified. Image generation has become a mainstream feature across consumer apps and creative suites, while video generation is quickly emerging as the next competitive frontier. By developing both an image model and a video model, OpenAI appears to be positioning itself for a market where users expect a single assistant to write, design, animate, and edit across formats.

In practical terms, an image model typically focuses on generating or editing still images, enabling tasks such as background replacement, object insertion, style transformation, and high-fidelity rendering from text prompts. A video model extends those capabilities into time-based media, which can include generating short clips, animating still images, or editing existing footage through natural-language instructions. While the input does not specify exact features, the direction is consistent with the industry’s momentum toward end-to-end content creation pipelines powered by generative AI.

A new text model aimed at coding

Alongside the visual work, the company is also developing a new text-based model that “aids with coding.” That phrasing points to a model tuned for software development tasks such as code completion, debugging, refactoring, test generation, documentation, and explaining unfamiliar codebases. Coding assistants have become one of the clearest commercial use cases for large language models, because the value is measurable: fewer errors, faster iteration, and reduced time spent on repetitive tasks.

A coding-focused model can also be engineered to handle longer context windows (useful for navigating large repositories), stronger instruction-following (useful for adhering to style guides), and better tool integration (useful for running tests, searching files, or checking build outputs). If OpenAI brings forward a dedicated coding model, it may aim to improve reliability on complex programming tasks where general-purpose chat models sometimes struggle, especially in multi-step changes that require consistent updates across multiple files.

Why coding models are a strategic battleground

The market for developer AI has become crowded, with major cloud providers and AI labs competing to embed assistants into integrated development environments and enterprise workflows. A purpose-built coding model can help a company differentiate on accuracy, speed, security controls, and compatibility with popular toolchains. For enterprises, the stakes are higher: code suggestions must align with internal libraries, comply with licensing policies, and avoid introducing vulnerabilities. As a result, coding assistants increasingly compete on safeguards and governance as much as on raw capability.

What this could mean for creators and businesses

If OpenAI releases new image and video models, the impact would likely be felt across creative industries and marketing teams. Brands increasingly want rapid iteration on ad concepts, social video variants, product imagery, and localized content. Multimodal AI can compress production timelines, though it also raises questions about authenticity, rights management, and disclosure.

For businesses, the attraction is workflow integration: generating a product shot, turning it into a short promo clip, and writing the accompanying landing page copy—all with consistent branding—can reduce the friction between ideation and execution. For smaller teams, especially startups and independent creators, the ability to produce professional-grade visuals and video without a full studio can be economically significant.

Key issues: safety, provenance, and trust

As image and video generation improves, so do concerns around misuse, including deepfakes, impersonation, and misleading political or financial content. Any advanced visual model is likely to be judged not only on quality, but also on its guardrails, watermarking or provenance features, and policies around sensitive content. The industry is steadily moving toward standards that help viewers understand whether media is AI-generated or edited, though adoption and enforcement remain uneven.

Where OpenAI’s development fits in the AI race

The push into image and video models reflects a broader industry shift: AI labs are moving from single-modality systems toward unified platforms. This trend is driven by user demand—people want one assistant that can handle diverse tasks—and by competitive pressure, as leading AI companies seek to lock in ecosystems of tools, APIs, and developer communities.

A dedicated coding text model also fits this platform strategy. Developers are a powerful distribution channel; once a coding assistant is embedded into daily workflows, it can influence infrastructure choices, cloud spending, and tool adoption across an organization. That makes developer-focused AI a high-leverage product category, even when it’s packaged as a feature inside a broader assistant.

What to watch next

Details remain limited based on the provided input, including timelines, model names, and whether these systems will be offered via consumer apps, enterprise products, or APIs. The next signals to watch will be product announcements, developer documentation, and any mention of performance benchmarks, safety measures, or partnerships that indicate how OpenAI plans to deploy these models at scale.

For users, the key question is how seamlessly these tools will work together—whether the same assistant can move from writing code to generating assets to producing video, without sacrificing reliability or safety. For the broader AI sector, the development points to a future where multimodal creation and coding assistance are not separate products, but expectations built into the default experience.

Dailyza will continue monitoring for official releases and technical details as OpenAI expands its next wave of models.

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Aden Erickson

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