Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc./Alexandria Venture Investments Receives 2025 Charles A. Sanders, MD, Partnership Award From the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health – Company Announcement – FT.com – Financial Times
  • Wall Street muted and FTSE jumps as traders await Tesla earnings and digest UK inflation data
  • Is the Cryptocurrency XRP (Ripple) a Millionaire Maker?
  • Bolivia’s new president courts lithium investments
  • Need to solve homelessness and invest in arts go hand-in-hand, Bloomington official says
  • Brussels Parliament to confirm outgoing Finance Minister’s replacement on Thursday
  • Deloitte study: most EU financial institutions are in early preparation stage to comply with the new anti-money laundering and countering financing of terrorism requirements and need significant investments to align to the new European framework
  • Hands off our investments: why IG is urging the Chancellor to protect retail investors
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Art Stocks»Shutterstock will start selling AI-generated stock imagery with help from OpenAI
Art Stocks

Shutterstock will start selling AI-generated stock imagery with help from OpenAI

October 25, 20225 Mins Read


Will AI image generators kill the stock image industry? It’s a question asked by many following the rise of text-to-image AI models in recent years. The answer from the industry’s incumbents, though, is “no” — not if we can start selling AI-generated content first.

Today, stock image giant Shutterstock has announced an extended partnership with OpenAI, which will see the AI lab’s text-to-image model DALL-E 2 directly integrated into Shutterstock “in the coming months.” In addition, Shutterstock is launching a “Contributor Fund” that will reimburse creators when the company sells work to train text-to-image AI models. This follows widespread criticism from artists whose output has been scraped from the web without their consent to create these systems. Notably, Shutterstock is also banning the sale of AI-generated art on its site that is not made using its DALL-E integration.

Shutterstock is banning third-party AI art and offering its own DALL-E integration

In a press statement, Shutterstock’s CEO Paul Hennessy said: “The mediums to express creativity are constantly evolving and expanding. We recognize that it is our great responsibility to embrace this evolution and to ensure that the generative technology that drives innovation is grounded in ethical practices.”

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, said: “We’re excited for Shutterstock to offer DALL-E images to its customers as one of the first deployments through our API, and we look forward to future collaborations as artificial intelligence becomes an integral part of artists’ creative workflows.”

This isn’t the first time Shutterstock and OpenAI have worked together in this domain. From 2021 onwards, Shutterstock sold images and metadata to OpenAI to help create DALL-E (OpenAI’s Altman describes this data as “critical to the training of DALL-E”). Now, with the integration of OpenAI’s text-to-image AI, the partnership is going full circle, and DALL-E’s output will compete with the same individuals whose work was used to train it.

AI art generators can be used to create a wide range of images — but they’re trained on data scraped from the web, usually without creators’ consent.
Image: The Verge via Lexica

If Shutterstock’s images were as important to creating DALL-E as Altman claims, the platform’s contributors may understandably feel aggrieved that their own content is being used to put them out of a job. This is why Shutterstock is also launching its Contributor Fund, which will be used to pay artists, photographers, and designers when content they uploaded to Shutterstock is sold by the company to firms like OpenAI in order to develop generative AI models.

It’s a significant move — the first major initiative by a platform holder to reimburse creators in this way — but it also underscores the fraught legal and ethical questions surrounding this new technology.

Although scraping or buying data to train AI art generators seems to be legal (covered by Fair Use), many experts worry about future challenges and complications. Getty Images, for example, has banned the sale of AI art on its platform because of fears that its inability to copyright the output of these systems will lead to licensing problems for customers.

When asked about these issues, a spokesperson for Shutterstock told The Verge that there were “lot of questions and uncertainty around this new technology, specifically when it comes to the concept of ownership,” but that the company’s stance is that “because AI content generation models leverage the IP of many artists and their content, AI-generated content ownership cannot be assigned to an individual and must instead compensate the many artists who were involved in the creation of each new piece of content.”

The Contributor Fund will pay Shutterstock users when their content is used to train AI models

This is why Shutterstock is banning AI art uploaded to its platform by third parties — because it can’t validate the model used to create the content so can’t be sure who owns the copyright. (Of course, banning third-party AI-generated art will also help protect its own business by funneling users towards its DALL-E integration.) And while the company seems to believe it has no legal obligation to reimburse creators whose content is used to train DALL-E, the creation of the Contributor Fund suggests it foresees criticism and possible damage to its reputation.

“Given the collective nature of generative content, we developed a revenue share compensation model where contributors whose content was involved in training generative models will receive a share of the earnings from datasets and downloads of all AI-generated content produced on our platform,” a Shutterstock spokesperson told The Verge. “Contributors will receive a share of the entire contract value paid by platform partners. The share individual contributors receive will be proportionate to the volume of their content and metadata that is included in the purchased datasets.”

Shutterstock says these payouts will be distributed every six months, and will include “both earnings from data deals as well as royalties from generic licensing on Shutterstock.” The company gave no indication of what a typical payout might be.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Rembrandt paintings to be offered as shares on a public stock exchange

October 15, 2025 Art Stocks

Inside the Most Expensive Art Collections Owned by Celebrities and Billionaires

September 27, 2025 Art Stocks

How Canadian investors can build wealth with luxury goods and art rather than scary stocks

September 27, 2025 Art Stocks

Picasso or Bitcoin? How art’s status is changing among the super-rich – The Art Newspaper

September 19, 2025 Art Stocks

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Pursues Semiconductor Growth Opportunities in Malaysia

August 24, 2025 Art Stocks

Gertrude Launches Public Investment Round to Transform the Art World

August 20, 2025 Art Stocks
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc./Alexandria Venture Investments Receives 2025 Charles A. Sanders, MD, Partnership Award From the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health – Company Announcement – FT.com – Financial Times

October 22, 2025 Investments 1 Min Read

Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc./Alexandria Venture Investments Receives 2025 Charles A. Sanders, MD, Partnership Award…

Wall Street muted and FTSE jumps as traders await Tesla earnings and digest UK inflation data

October 22, 2025

Is the Cryptocurrency XRP (Ripple) a Millionaire Maker?

October 22, 2025

Bolivia’s new president courts lithium investments

October 22, 2025
Our Picks

Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc./Alexandria Venture Investments Receives 2025 Charles A. Sanders, MD, Partnership Award From the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health – Company Announcement – FT.com – Financial Times

October 22, 2025

Wall Street muted and FTSE jumps as traders await Tesla earnings and digest UK inflation data

October 22, 2025

Is the Cryptocurrency XRP (Ripple) a Millionaire Maker?

October 22, 2025

Bolivia’s new president courts lithium investments

October 22, 2025
Our Picks

Internationally acclaimed artist to open new art gallery in Exmouth

October 21, 2025

Bank should take concerns over private finance ‘very seriously’, says Bailey – The Independent

October 21, 2025

Madison Investments Q3 2025 Market And Economic Review

October 21, 2025
Latest updates

Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc./Alexandria Venture Investments Receives 2025 Charles A. Sanders, MD, Partnership Award From the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health – Company Announcement – FT.com – Financial Times

October 22, 2025

Wall Street muted and FTSE jumps as traders await Tesla earnings and digest UK inflation data

October 22, 2025

Is the Cryptocurrency XRP (Ripple) a Millionaire Maker?

October 22, 2025
Weekly Updates

Javier Milei in turmoil for encouraging the purchase of an obscure cryptocurrency

February 17, 2025

Alternative Assets: A Quick Guide to Investing in Art

July 14, 2023

City gets an art gallery aimed at fostering innovation and art

April 20, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2025 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.