After ChatGPT-generated images in the style of Studio Ghibli drew criticism online,Romance Archives OpenAI has shared a response addressing the backlash.
OpenAI released native image generation in GPT-4o earlier this week, with a live demo showing CEO Sam Altman and OpenAI staffers using ChatGPT to turn a selfie into an anime-style image that looked a whole lot like the unique and painstakingly crafted animated films of Studio Ghibli. Soon, Studio Ghibli-style versions of memes, selfies, and family photos, all automated by ChatGPT, went viral on X. Altman himself turned his X profile picture into a Studio Ghibli-esque image of himself and directly mentioned the distinct style in an X post, writing, "wake up one day to hundreds of messages: 'look i made you into a twink ghibli style haha.'"
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The viral moment quickly turned into questions of copyright infringement and IP theft as users wondered whether OpenAI trained GPT-4o on Studio Ghibli films without permission. But the larger issue that troubled many users was how the artwork of Hayao Miyazaki's studio, which famously hand-paints almost every frame of their animated films, could be quickly automated and commodified for the purpose of promoting a new OpenAI product.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This was especially prescient given Miyazaki's stance on AI-generated work based on a clip that went viral where Miyazaki expressed his disgust, saying, "I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In response, OpenAI has addressed the criticisms sharing the following statement to Mashable:
Our goal is to give users as much creative freedom as possible. We continue to prevent generations in the style of individual living artists, but we do permit broader studio styles—which people have used to generate and share some truly delightful and inspired original fan creations. We're always learning from real-world use and feedback, and we’ll keep refining our policies as we go.
OpenAI did not address our questions of whether OpenAI had a pre-existing licensing partnership with Studio Ghibli or whether Studio Ghibli films had been included in the training data.
The technical distinction that theoretically lets OpenAI off the hook is that ChatGPT can generate "broader studio styles" but not individual styles of living artists. Indeed, when asking ChatGPT to generate a Hayao Miyazaki-style animation of an uploaded image, ChatGPT denied the request, saying it "violates our content policies." Replacing Hayao Miyazaki's name with "Studio Ghibli" in a new prompt successfully complied with the request.
According to OpenAI's GPT-4o system card, which outlines the model's ethical and safety challenges, "The model can generate images that resemble the aesthetics of some artists’ work when their name is used in the prompt." The section goes on to say, "We opted to take a conservative approach with this version of 4o image generation, as we learn more about how 4o image generation is used by the creative community." But it's unclear how unquestioningly granting requests for Studio Ghibli-style animations is a conservative approach.
The system card section also specifies, "We added a refusal which triggers when a user attempts to generate an image in the style of a living artist."
So, there you have it folks. You can ask ChatGPT to create an image in the style of a studio, but not a living artist. Miyazaki's work can be appropriated if you plug in the name of the studio that he founded, but not his own name.
Topics ChatGPT OpenAI
Your name could shape your face, new study suggestsElephant frightens the bejesus out of group of tourists on safariA volcano just erupted in Europe and the footage is amazingAlternatives to the pussy hat if you're honestly too embarrassed to wear oneSorry Beyoncé fans, here's who you'll get at Coachella insteadHyperloop One begins initial talks with the Indian governmentNew 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2' trailer is all that and Kurt RussellIn an ironic twist, a 1991 Shell ad contains a warning about climate changeSean Spicer likes CNN when it works for himObamas sign book deal worth 'tens of millions'#EveryoneWelcome campaign challenges you to stand in solidarity with trans peopleApple dropping lightning for a USBZara's 'love your curves' advert is pissing off the internetPinterest doubles down on AI because 'most of Pinterest hasn’t been built yet''Overwatch' update buffs Bastion and introduces custom game browserScientists are firing lasers at dinosaur fossils, and the result is awesomeCongresswomen in white troll Trump to his face during joint addressThere might be a realWarren Buffett: 'If a lady says no, she means maybe'Alternatives to the pussy hat if you're honestly too embarrassed to wear one Staff Picks: Bandits, Revenge, and Decapitated Animals by The Paris Review Redux: On Trial by The Paris Review Paradise for Bookworms The Hardest Guess Cooking with Fyodor Dostoyevsky by Valerie Stivers Katherine Mansfield Would Approve by Ashleigh Young How to Live in a Dystopian Fiction How Like the Mind It Is by Ellen O’Connell Whittet The Art of Spooning The Spectacle of Women’s Wrestling What Is Andre Dubus Doing, Anyway? by Ann Beattie Hero’s Journey: An Interview with Taylor Mac In Memory of Stanley Cavell The Radical Notion of a Smartphone How Well Do You Know These Writers’ Lives? Grilling with Homer by Valerie Stivers The Burning House by Hanya Yanagihara A Life of Reading Is Never Lonely Ode to the Dinkus A Space Cowboy’s Curriculum
1.9567s , 10131.65625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Romance Archives】,Co-creation Information Network