OpenAI yesterday added a new feature called “Images in ChatGPT” to its chats, which with the help of the Gpt-4O can produce an image. One day after this feature, there was a lot of Gpt-4O images that have the style of Japanese Studio Ghibli. This has raised legal concerns about this capability.
In the past 24 hours, images of Ilan Musk, Lord of the Rings and Donald Trump have been released in the style of animations, even Samletman’s CEO Sam Altman, also changed his profile image to a Molluscious image, probably made by the Gpt-4O image tool.
Copyright’s legal violation of image production with ChatGpt?
Evan Brown, a lawyer for intellectual property, says the production of images is legally gray; Because “style” is not supported by copyright law, but if Openai has taught its model on the frameworks of the film, there may be a legal issue.
The courts are still investigating whether the use of publishing works to teach artificial intelligence is subject to fair use.

The New York Times and several other publishers are currently prosecuting Openai, claiming that the company has trained its models without the permission or payment of their works. Similar complaints have been made against Meta and Midjourney.
Openai said in a statement to Techcrunch, although ChatGPT refuses to imitate the style of living artists, it permits imitation of the general style of studios. Of course, artists such as Hayao Miyazaki, the founder of the studio, are the creator of the unique style of the studio.

In addition, users have been able to create Dr. Susse or Pixar-style images with the Gpt-4O. Experiments show that the OpenAI tool reproduces the best way to reproduce the style compared to competitors like Google Gemini, Grok and Playground.ai.
Although this technology is a major step in producing artificial intelligence images, high demand has led Openai to delay its release to free users.
RCO NEWS