A China-based startup, Sand AI, has released an openly licensed video-generating AI model thatโs garnered praise from entrepreneurs like Microsoft Research Asia founding director Kai-Fu Lee. But Sand AI appears to be censoring images that might raise the ire of Chinese regulators from the hosted version of the model, according to TechCrunchโs testing.
Earlier this week, Sand AI announced Magi-1, a model that generates videos byย โautoregressivelyโ predicting sequences of frames. The company claims the model can generate high-quality, controllable footage that captures physics more accurately than rival open models.
๐ You wonโt believe this is AI-generated
๐ง You wonโt believe itโs open-source
๐ฌ You wonโt believe itโs FREEMagi-1 video model just humiliated commercial video tools
Details and examples below: ๐ pic.twitter.com/zlXRecWeqH
โ Farhan (@mhdfaran) April 21, 2025
Magi-1 is too impractical to run on most consumer hardware. Itโs 24 billion parameters in size, and requires between four and eight Nvidia H100 GPUs to run. (Parameters are the internal variables models use to make predictions.) For many users โ this reporter included โ Sand AIโs platform is the only place they can test drive Magi-1.
The platform needs a โpromptโ image to kick off video generation. Not all prompts are permissible, TechCrunch quickly discovered. Sand AI blocks image uploads of Xi Jinping, Tiananmen Square and Tank Man, the Taiwanese flag, and insignias supporting Hong Kong liberation. Filtering appears to be happening at the image level; renaming image files didnโt skirt the blocking.
Sand AI isnโt the only Chinese startup preventing uploads of politically sensitive images to its video generation tool. Hailuo AI, Shanghai-based MiniMaxโs generative media platform, blocks photos of Xi Jinping as well. But Sand AIโs filtering appears to be particularly aggressive; Hauiluo allows images of Tiananmen Square.
As Wired explained in a piece from January, models in China are required to follow stringent information controls. A 2023 law forbids models from generating content that โdamages the unity of the country and social harmonyโ โ that is, counters the governmentโs historical and political narratives. To comply, Chinese startups often censor their models, either through prompt-level filters or fine-tuning.
Interestingly, while Chinese models tend to block political speech, they often have fewer filters than their American counterparts for pornographic content. 404 recently reported that a number of video generators released by Chinese companies lackย basic guardrails that prevent people from generating nonconsensual nudity.


