Good morning. Seedance 2.0 is now baked directly into CapCut. Adobe previewed a tool that lets you direct AI video as it generates. And fake AI footage of the Artemis II moon flyby is going viral. Have you tried Seedance inside CapCut yet? Hit reply and tell me. We cover all three below

🔥 Seedance 2.0 Is Now Built Into CapCut

Seedance 2.0 isn't just available through CapCut anymore. It's integrated directly into the editing workflow. You can generate video clips from text prompts right inside the editor, then drop them straight into your timeline. No switching between apps, no exporting and importing. Clips up to 15 seconds, six aspect ratios, native audio sync.

CapCut also launched Video Studio, a canvas-based workspace that replaces the timeline entirely. An AI agent writes your script, builds a storyboard, generates footage with Seedance 2.0, and assembles the final video. It's live on CapCut web now with free credits. Currently rolling out in SEA, MENA, LATAM, and Africa. US and Europe still waiting.

Adobe Just Previewed Real-Time AI Video Controls

Adobe unveiled MotionStream, an experimental tool that lets you interact with AI video while it's generating. Start with a text prompt, then click and drag objects to reposition them, adjust camera angles, and watch the scene update in real time. Move an elephant and its legs and ears move naturally with it.

It works by generating video in segments instead of all at once. You see the first piece while the rest renders in the background. It's still a research project, no release date, no word on if it'll come to Premiere or Firefly. But the demo is impressive and the direction is clear: AI video is moving from "type and wait" to "direct in real time."

Watch Out for Fake Artemis II Videos

The Artemis II lunar flyby just sent astronauts farther from Earth than any human ever. But your feed is probably full of AI-generated moon videos that aren't real. BBC and CBC fact-checkers found viral images of astronauts in front of green screens were actually made with Google Gemini. PolitiFact confirmed colorful lunar surface photos circulating on X and TikTok aren't from NASA either.

If you see stunning Artemis footage, check NASA's official gallery before sharing. The fakes are short clips with impossible visuals, inconsistent lighting, and usually posted by low-authority accounts. This is what happens when AI video tools get good enough to fool people at scale.

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