
-
Grieving Singapore father on mission to save teens from drug vapes
-
Wilson drills game-winner as Aces hold off Mercury in WNBA Finals
-
What we know about the new Gaza deal
-
Son Heung-min set to make South Korean history in Brazil friendly
-
Stocks mixed as traders assess AI rally, US rates and shutdown
-
Jays down Yankees to advance in MLB playoffs as Tigers, Cubs stay alive
-
EU chief faces confidence votes in fractious parliament
-
US federal workers apply for loans as shutdown hits military morale
-
Pro-Palestinian protest threat racks up tension for Italy's World Cup qualifier with Israel
-
Israel, Hamas agree to first phase of peace plan
-
How Donald Trump pulled off his Gaza deal
-
Trump calls for jailing of Illinois Democrats as troops arrive
-
Suspect in US court months after deadly Los Angeles fire
-
Trump says Israel, Hamas agree to first phase of peace plan
-
Boca Juniors manager Russo dies aged 69: Argentine Football Association
-
US faces travel delays as government shutdown wears on
-
Tigers rally to beat Mariners, stay alive in MLB playoffs
-
Breast cancer screening scandal outrages Spain
-
Man Utd win on women's Champions League debut, Chelsea held by Twente
-
Country music star clashes with Trump govt over immigration raids
-
Flintoff did not feel 'valued' by new Superchargers owners
-
Zidane's son Luca 'proud' to play for Algeria
-
'Daily struggle for survival' for Haiti children, UN report says
-
Kane out but Tuchel wants more of the same from England
-
US facing worsening flight delays as shutdown snarls airports
-
Outgoing French PM sees new premier named in next 48 hours
-
Ratcliffe gives Amorim three years to prove himself at Man Utd
-
Jane Goodall's final wish: blast Trump, Musk and Putin to space
-
Salah scores twice as Egypt qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
New 'Knives Out' spotlights Trump-era US political landscape
-
Failed assassin of Argentina's Kirchner given 10-year prison term
-
Man arrested over deadly January fire in Los Angeles
-
La Liga confirm 'historic' Barcelona match in Miami
-
France's Le Pen vows to block any government
-
Mooney ton rescues Australia in stunning World Cup win over Pakistan
-
Afghan mobile access to Facebook, Instagram intentionally restricted: watchdog
-
Medvedev to face De Minaur in Shanghai quarter-finals
-
Conceicao named as new coach of Al Ittihad
-
Victoria Beckham reveals struggle to reinvent herself in Netflix series
-
'Solids full of holes': Nobel-winning materials explained
-
Iran releases Franco-German accused of spying
-
Gisele Pelicot urges accused rapist to 'take responsibility'
-
BBVA, Sabadell clash heats up ahead of takeover deadline
-
World economy not doing as badly as feared, IMF chief says
-
Veggie 'burgers' face the chop as EU lawmakers back labeling ban
-
Former FBI chief James Comey pleads not guilty in case pushed by Trump
-
Germany raises growth forecasts, but warns reforms needed
-
Serie A chief blasts Rabiot's criticism of Milan match in Australia
-
From refugee to Nobel: Yaghi hails science's 'equalising force'
-
De Minaur, Auger-Aliassime through to Shanghai quarter-finals

From Messi to Trump, AI action figures are the rage
The latest internet obsession is one impossible to escape on social media: images of well-known figures in plastic toy packaging alongside evocative props... welcome to the meme of AI action figures.
The figurines aren't real, but thanks to ChatGPT's new image generator they look genuine, and they are flooding platforms from TikTok to LinkedIn.
There, you'll see a "toy" image of football star Lionel Messi alongside a ball and trophies, or a caricature of US President Donald Trump alongside a MAGA cap and a sign reading tariffs.
Some celebrities have done versions of themselves. For instance, actor Brooke Shields posted a doll version of herself with a miniature dog and needlepoint kit to her 2.5 million Instagram followers.
Many ordinary users have done likewise, posting packaged images of them as figurines -- after inputting photos of themselves into ChatGPT's image generator.
While pervasive, and in most cases fun, the trend raises questions about copyright, and potential risks in handing biometric data over to a generative-AI company.
ChatGPT does the rendering for free, but requires users to sign up to the imaging platform used, adding to OpenAI's renown as leader in consumer uses of artificial intelligence -- and also for sucking up massive amounts of user data.
Anais Loubere, an expert on social media and founder of the agency Digital Pipelettes, said the boom was riding on a "technological breakthrough" in AI image rendering.
Before the action figure meme, AI artwork inspired by famed Japanese animation outfit Studio Ghibli -- maker of Oscar-winning "Spirited Away" -- flooded the internet at the end of March, posted by users subscribed to OpenAI's paid service.
Ahlem Abidi-Barthe, an online marketing professor, told AFP that the key to the success of the trends was that "they can be in personalised formats".
"That tickles the egos of consumers," she said.
The Ghibli and action-figure memes also tapped into childhood nostalgia, "which contributes to extreme virality".
OpenAI's boss Sam Altman boasted that the company picked up a million new users "in the last hour" the moment its imaging service became free.
ChatGPT in March became the most downloaded app in the world, overtaking TikTok and Instagram, according to data analysis firm Appfigures.
- Copyright issues -
But human artists are protesting the AI copying of their works with no payment nor credit. OpenAI, for example, had no licence from Studio Ghibli.
Several generative AI companies, OpenAI among them, are being sued for copyright infringement in the United States, but to date no judgment has been made.
The AI companies insist they are abiding by relevant laws but refuse to divulge what works have been ingested in their training libraries.
"Behind the magic" there are also "environmental costs", as French astronaut Thomas Pesquet has pointed out.
Each ChatGPT prompt for text output uses 2.9 Wh of electricity, or 10 times what a Google search uses, according to the International Energy Agency. And image generation requires more.
Then there is the risk posed by users uploading photos of themselves, and perhaps of people close to them, or acquaintances, as well as other personal data.
"When people upload selfies or prompts to these AI generators, they're essentially handing over personal data to companies with unclear intentions. Your image is data, and data has value," said Joe Davies, a tech expert at the British SEO agency Fatjoe.
The AI action figure meme will certainly fizzle out, predicted Loubere.
"These trends aren't meant to last. By the time you see the 50th AI action figure on LinkedIn or Insta, you know it's saturated," she said.
K.Hofmann--VB