Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Computing
  4. News

Netflix’s VOID AI removes objects while preserving real-world motion

The system analyzes interactions, then regenerates footage so actions still make sense.

Add as a preferred source on Google
The My Netflix section on the Netflix iOS app.
Digital Trends

Netflix is detailing an AI video tool that goes beyond simple cleanup. Its system, called VOID, cuts elements from footage while keeping everything else behaving in a way that still feels grounded.

That marks a shift for AI video editing. Existing tools can erase unwanted elements, but they often leave behind movement that feels off, like objects floating or actions stopping without cause. VOID focuses on what happens after an edit, rebuilding the sequence so the outcome still follows believable cause and effect.

Recommended Videos

The research shows the model can adjust interactions in response to changes, so if a supporting object is removed, the remaining elements react naturally instead of freezing or glitching. It effectively rewrites the physical logic of a shot to match the new setup.

For editors and studios, that points to cleaner fixes in post-production without breaking immersion, especially in shots where multiple elements interact.

How VOID rewrites a shot

VOID treats edits as chain reactions. It maps out what could be affected once something is taken out, then reconstructs the sequence so the action still tracks logically.

The model starts by identifying impacted regions, including where shadows, collisions, or support might change. It then builds a structured map of those shifts and generates a new version of the footage that reflects them. A second refinement pass smooths movement and keeps objects from warping as they follow updated paths.

Why physics-aware editing matters

What stands out is how VOID handles cause and effect. The model was trained on thousands of simulated sequences, which helps it understand how objects respond when conditions change.

In one example, removing part of a domino chain doesn’t just erase tiles, it stops the reaction entirely because there’s nothing left to carry the motion forward. In another case, removing a person interacting with objects doesn’t freeze the shot, the remaining behavior continues as expected.

VOID applies learned rules about cause and effect instead of copying patterns from past footage.

What to watch next

VOID is still a research system, with details shared in an arXiv paper rather than a product release. There’s no timeline yet for when this kind of editing will reach consumer tools or professional software.

Still, the direction is clear. As AI video workflows expand, tools that understand physical interactions will become more important for high-quality edits, especially in film and TV where small inconsistencies break immersion quickly.

The next step is scaling to more complex scenarios. That includes denser setups, more objects, and longer sequences where multiple interactions overlap. If that progress holds, physics-aware editing could push video tools toward full sequence reconstruction that holds up under closer scrutiny.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Tidal lays down the rules for AI music. I wish Spotify and everyone else would follow
Tidal app showing on iPhone 15 Pro.

Every week, the AI music problem is getting increasingly hard to ignore, especially for streaming platforms. Deezer reported that 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform daily is now AI-generated; that's almost half the songs.

Spotify relabeled and tightened its AI policies last September, while Apple Music announced a tagging approach in March. However, the subscription-based artist-first music platform Tidal has done something none of them did. 

Read more
Netflix just got a whole lot more irritating if you share a screen in a household
Every profile will soon need its own email address, adding another hurdle for households that share a TV.
Netflix on TV couple watching

Netflix's password-sharing crackdown isn't over just yet. The streaming giant is now rolling out another change that could make shared household accounts a little more cumbersome, this time by asking every profile on an account to have its own email address. While the move isn't designed to stop families from sharing a subscription, it does add another layer of identity verification that many users probably weren't asking for.

Netflix wants every profile to have its own identity

Read more
In the last hours of Prime Day, I found the best deals to save you the regret of missing out
A few more hours, a lot of good deals, and no time left to overthink it.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Prime Day 2026 officially ends today, and while some deals are already sold out, I've sifted through the entire website to find the best ones that are still live. Below are the picks I'd confidently put my own money on. They include everything from mid-range Android smartphones to flagship foldables, bone-conduction earbuds to Bose, and smartwatches across every price bracket. Act fast, before the clock runs out.

Best Amazon Prime Day deals on smartphones

Read more