Search
OPINION

AI-Generated Art Sounds Alarming, But It Doesn’t Have to Be

Microsoft Designer is powered by OpenAI’s DALL-E 2 AI technology and will generate any image that users type into a box.

Advertisement
Highlights
  • Microsoft Designer app is currently available only in beta
  • DALL-E 2 bans images showing explicit sexual and violent content
  • Microsoft Designer is powered by OpenAI’s DALL-E 2 AI technology
AI-Generated Art Sounds Alarming, But It Doesn’t Have to Be

Microsfot Designer tool will be offered as part of Microsoft 365

Photo Credit: Microsoft

Just a few months ago, the concept of using artificial intelligence to generate unique artwork seemed cutting-edge and futuristic. Pretty soon it will be as mundane as running a Google search. Microsoft announced this week that it was making the most of its $1 billion (roughly Rs. 8,250 crore) investment in OpenAI, an artificial intelligence research outfit, and bringing that firm's standout AI service to Microsoft 365, the company's flagship bundle of software services. Microsoft Designer is powered by OpenAI's DALL-E 2 AI technology and will generate any image that users type into a box, such as “cake with berries, bread and pastries for the fall.”

It's a swift step forward for DALL-E 2, which was first announced just six months ago. While the Designer app is available only in beta currently, the rollout underscores how quickly art-generating AI has been moving, to the extent that artists have expressed concern. Some artist names come up especially frequently as text prompts in similar art generators, and that has some worried about what the technology will do to their careers. AI ethicists are also fretting about a flood of new fake imagery hitting the web and powering misinformation campaigns.

Yet Microsoft's involvement in this field is good news. The company is echoing OpenAI's limited rollout of DALL-E 2, as well as its strict rules about the types of images it will generate. For instance, DALL-E 2 bans images showing explicit sexual and violent content and does so by simply removing such images from the database of pictures used to train its model. Microsoft has said it will use similar filters.

Microsoft also said it would block text prompts on “sensitive topics,” which it didn't elaborate on, but which will again most likely mirror DALL-E 2's policy of banning queries related to things like politics or illegal activity, or images of well-known figures like politicians or celebrities.

There has been some hand-wringing among tech ethicists that open-source versions of this kind of technology, such as a tool released in August by British startup Stability AI, will lead to a free-for-all of fake content that will infect social networks and disrupt coming elections (think fake images of Joe Biden or Donald Trump in controversial situations).

But a carefully curated version of the technology from Microsoft seems to dampen that prospect for two reasons. First, opportunistic photo fakers are more likely to find their efforts stymied by the filters embedded in the technology. Also, as more people use such tools, the general public will become more aware that photos on the internet could be generated by AI.

It's extraordinary that this form of creative artificial intelligence is moving so quickly and that Microsoft's Designer tool will soon sit alongside business-software stalwarts like Word, Outlook and Excel. This is, as some have already pointed out, like clip art on steroids, limited only by a user's imagination.

It also underscores how hard it can be to predict the direction that artificial intelligence will take. A few years ago, tech pundits widely expected that we would have self-driving trucks and cars on the road that would slash accident rates and put human drivers out of work. Now it's artists and illustrators who have greater reason for concern, though the nature of their work may simply change. As art generation comes to the fingertips of millions, they will need to be flexible.

© 2022 Bloomberg L.P.


5G is here. Should you buy a 4G phone? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

 
Show Full Article
Please wait...
Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Madras Matinee Now Available for Streaming on Multiple OTT Platforms
  2. Best Window ACs under Rs 30,000 in India (July 2025): See List
  3. Gadgets 360 With Technical Guruji: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Design
  1. Astronomers Capture First-Ever Image of a Dead Star That Exploded Twice in Rare Supernova Event
  2. Climate Satellite MethaneSAT Fails After Just One Year in Orbit
  3. New Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Speeds Through Solar System
  4. The Hunt: Rajiv Gandhi Assassination Now Available For Streaming on SonyLIV
  5. Best Window ACs under Rs 30,000 in India (July 2025): Carrier, Voltas, Lloyd, and More
  6. CSIRO Uses Quantum AI to Revolutionize Semiconductor Design
  7. Metamaterial Breaks Thermal Symmetry, Enables One-Way Heat Emission
  8. NASA TEMPO Satellite to Continue Tracking Pollution Hourly from Space Until 2026
  9. Russia Launches Progress 92 Cargo Freighter with 3 Tons of Supplies to the ISS Successfully
  10. Sidlingu 2 Streaming Now on Prime Video: Know Everything About This Kannada Comedy Drama
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
App Store App Store
Available in Hindi
App Store
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.
Trending Products »
Latest Tech News »