Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

AI-generated images to be sold as stock photos through Shutterstock

Add as a preferred source on Google

Shutterstock — one of the most popular stock image websites — plans on selling AI-created images, according to reporting from Gizmodo.

Shutterstock will generate the images using DALLE-2, and the company claims it will compensate creators whose images are used to generate the images.

An astronaut on a horse generated by Dall-E-2 AI image generator.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

DALL-E 2 is one of the most popular AI art generators, and Shutterstock has an ongoing relationship with the AI’s developer, OpenAI. Shutterstock plans on moving forward with monetizing AI artwork, even while conversations are ongoing about the legality of the practice. Shutterstock believes it has the solution, though. The company will establish a “Contributor Fund” to pay contributors when their images are used by DALL-E 2.

Recommended Videos

However, selling AI-generated images is far from a consensus, especially in the stock image market. The CEO of Getty Images, Craig Peters, recently aired his concerns in an interview with The Verge.

“There’s a lot of questions out there right now — about who owns the copyright to that material, about the rights that were leveraged to create that material — and we don’t want to put our customers into that legal risk,” he said. Peters also expressed concerns about the company’s competitors racing to monetize AI images, and he emphasized a need to answer questions about copyright and how to properly attribute and pay creators.

“I think the fact that these questions are not being addressed is the issue here,” he said. “In some cases, they’re just being thrown to the wayside. I think that’s dangerous. I don’t think it’s responsible. I think it could be illegal.”

AI-generated art has gained a lot of attention lately (for better and worse). Apps like Midjourney make the technology available to everyday people, and even Microsoft is throwing its weight behind the tech. Shutterstock is confident it has the solution, though, and you could get direct access to these DALLE-2 images within the next few months.

Caleb Clark
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Caleb Clark is a full-time writer that primarily covers consumer tech and gaming. He also writes frequently on Medium about…
This app gives your Mac a music player you’ll actually enjoy using
Apple Music on the Mac is a chore. Liqoria is the fix, and it plays nice with Spotify and YouTube too.
Liqoria music player

The Apple Music app on the Mac is not up to the mark. I don’t like how it looks or behaves, and Apple should take some inspiration from Spotify to make the app more modern and useful. Until that happens, we are stuck with a subpar app experience.

That’s why I never use the Apple Music app on my Mac and rely on third-party apps that let me control music. Today I am featuring one of the latest apps I discovered. It’s called Liqoria, and it’s probably the only music player app you will ever need.

Read more
Anthropic is giving away Claude Fable 5 at no extra cost for a limited time
You can try Claude Fable 5 for free - but don't wait too long
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Anthropic is making it a little easier for paying subscribers to try its newest AI model without spending extra money. The company has announced a limited-time promotion that gives users on eligible paid plans access to Claude Fable 5 at no additional cost until July 19, 2026. There's a catch, though: the model isn't completely unlimited, and once you hit a usage threshold, you'll either need to start paying or switch to another Claude model.

The promotion comes as competition in the AI assistant market continues to intensify. OpenAI, Google, Microsoft and Anthropic are all racing to get users onto their latest flagship models, often using free trials or promotional access to encourage adoption. Rather than offering unlimited access, Anthropic is betting that giving subscribers enough time to experience Fable 5's capabilities will convince many to continue using it after the promotion ends.

Read more
Scammers are now cloning trusted news websites to steal your money
Breaking news: That breaking news probably isn't breaking news
Scammers are turning trusted news brands into investment traps

Seeing a story on the website of a trusted news organisation is usually enough to lower your guard. Cybercriminals know that, and they're increasingly exploiting the credibility of major publishers to steal money from unsuspecting readers. The latest example involves fake Guardian articles featuring billionaire Jim Ratcliffe. Still, the scam is part of a much larger campaign that's also impersonating the BBC and other well-known media outlets.

According to The Guardian, fraudsters are creating convincing clones of legitimate news websites and filling them with fabricated stories designed to lure readers into bogus cryptocurrency and investment schemes. Instead of trying to hack victims directly, the scammers first convince them they're reading real journalism.

Read more