Bing Image Creator users are doing some... interesting things with new DALL-E 3 upgrade

AI generated images must be stopped.
By Chase DiBenedetto  on 
Microsoft, Bing, and GPT-4 logos swirling together.
With Bing Image Creator power comes Bing Image Creator responsibility. Credit: Jonathan Raa /NurPhoto via Getty Images

The internet continues to test the limits of artificial intelligence and the human capacity for absurdity, as users flocked online to share their outputs of the latest Bing Image Creator upgrade.

Quietly announced on Sept. 30, the latest iteration of Microsoft's image generation tool incorporates OpenAI's new DALL-E 3. Normally only accessible to ChatGPT Plus or Enterprise users, the free Bing Image Creator lets curious users test the new AI's limits.

Generative AI tools have ushered in a new era of creative and social litigation. In addition to DALL-E and Midjourney, large companies like Microsoft and Shutterstock have launched their own image-centered AIs, and in September, ChatGPT rolled out new voice and image capabilities for its chatbot.

But the power of these tools is also cause for concern, as platforms and the general public contend with the wider implications of AI-generated images, including their potential effect on political ads, nonconsensual imagery, and creative industries.

Only a few days after Microsoft's launch, the company attempted to block users from generating images featuring animated characters and the Twin Towers, after users found loopholes around the image creator's content guardrails.

"As with any new technology, some are trying to use it in ways that were not intended, which is why we are implementing a range of guardrails and filters to make Bing Image Creator a positive and helpful experience for users,” said Caitlin Roulston, director of communications at Microsoft, in a statement to the Verge.

On Oct.6, Bellingcat published a report that found 4chan users were already taking advantage of the upgraded tool to create racist and antisemitic propaganda.

"Bellingcat found the increase in Bing Image Creator’s capabilities has not been matched by an equal increase in moderation and safety measures. Users can now more easily generate images that glorify genocide, war crimes, and other content that violates Bing’s policies," according to Bellingcat.

In response to industry-wide concerns, tech companies are trying to ramp up their protections and policies against misuse.

But as is typical of the internet, amid the power struggles of users obsessed with testing the social limits of AI and companies attempting to innovate the next big thing, other people online just continued on with their own weird business.

Scroll on for some of the tamer, and some of the not-so-tame, uses of the Bing Image Creator.

"Where's Shrek?"

Video game characters breaking their contracts

"Disney characters take pictures of food on top of trashcans."

Squidward trying to log on in 2009

The Last Selfie

Dreams coming true

Darth Pope

Michael Myers king of the dunk

Militant cartoons?

Drake trail cam footage

Chase sits in front of a green framed window, wearing a cheetah print shirt and looking to her right. On the window's glass pane reads "Ricas's Tostadas" in red lettering.
Chase DiBenedetto
Social Good Reporter

Chase joined Mashable's Social Good team in 2020, covering online stories about digital activism, climate justice, accessibility, and media representation. Her work also touches on how these conversations manifest in politics, popular culture, and fandom. Sometimes she's very funny.


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