“OpenAI’s newest picture era mannequin, DALL-E 3, makes it SO straightforward to create comedian books!” posted Ammaar Reshi on Twitter. The previous Palintir product supervisor (now a design supervisor at Brex) then shared “4 panels for a fan-made Batman comedian made in underneath 5 minutes.”
Comedian E book Assets studies that then “social media spent a lot of the day dunking on the put up, criticizing the thought of celebrating the thought of a ‘comedian’ created via ‘A.I. artwork.'”
Comedian guide artist Javier Rodriguez famous that that is no different from simply cutting and pasting different comedian books into a comic book… [“You could do the same thing a while ago with a photocopier and some scissors. Stealing other people’s art seems easier now and lucrative for those behind generative models.”] Comedian guide author Sarah Horrocks called out the use of Brian Bolland’s work… [“That’s literally just Brian Bolland’s Joker. The shamelessness of this ‘technology’ is appalling. I guess it’s okay to steal. Just call it AI.”]
Justine Bateman, the previous actor who has turn into a vocal opponent of A.I. utilization within the arts, defined that DC must act to legally protect usage like this in the future… [“@DCOfficial, the longer you wait to send legal teams to @OpenAI, etc to demand that generative #AI training sets containing your copyrighted work be deleted, the more you make your entire library ‘fair use’…”]
