Image

Furious AI Users Say Their Prompts Are Being Plagiarized

Move over, Ship of Theseus — there’s a new paradoxical thought experiment in town.

Some power users of generative AI have grown so comfortable with their new tools — especially image-generating ones — that they now feel entitled to the specific prompts they use to churn out slop, as if the entire technology wasn’t based on the work of human artists that had been ingested without consent.

Consider Amira Zairi, a self-professed “AI educator” and “ambassador” for Adobe, LeonardoAI, and TripoAI, who posted a scathing rant this week on X-formerly-Twitter to her 49,000 followers. Her complaint? Other people were “plagiarizing” her unique AI prompts.

“‘Make your own prompts’ isn’t advice. It’s basic integrity,” Zairi wrote, using syntax that reads suspiciously like text generated by ChatGPT. “I’m honestly fed up. Changing a few words, renaming the prompt, or slightly rephrasing it doesn’t make it yours, the idea is still the same, the vibe is the same, and the results are obviously similar.”

“And no, this isn’t about one or two people, and it didn’t happen once!!!!” Zairi continued. “Creating your own prompts is actually easier than copying someone else’s work! Try it.”

“Make your own prompts” isn’t advice. It’s basic integrity.

I’m honestly fed up.
Changing a few words, renaming the prompt, or slightly rephrasing it doesn’t make it yours, the idea is still the same, the vibe is the same, and the results are obviously similar.

And no, this…

— Amira Zairi (@azed_ai) January 6, 2026

While Zairi is only the latest AI hound to bark about stolen prompts, she’s certainly not the first. Examples abound, as the Daily Dot pointed out back in December: consider a poster who railed about “prompt thieves in the AI art community,” or the “AI artist” who went on a tangent after someone aped his prompt “without knowing it’s mine.”

There’s even a niche market for preventative tools among cybersecurity developers. Late in 2024, an AI researcher named Xinyue Shen developed a tool called PromptShield to guard against so-called “prompt stealing.”

It’s all pretty rich, given that these AI tools were all trained on troves of human-made art and media without permission. In order to create generative AI models, tech companies systematically scrape vast amounts of copyrighted art from the web without consent, licensure, or compensation for the artists. This data is then used to train generative AI models that synthesize and churn out derivative images, an outcome some ethicists argue amounts to labor exploitation.

Put simply, AI bros are mad that people are stealing their recipe for the plagiarism machine — an irony which is pretty hard to ignore.

“What you are describing and complaining about is the fundamental function of the tech you’re advocating for, inextricable from it,” digital artist Rory Blank replied under Amira Zairi’s post. “Hope that helps.”

More on AI: AI Researchers Say They’ve Invented Incantations Too Dangerous to Release to the Public

The post Furious AI Users Say Their Prompts Are Being Plagiarized appeared first on Futurism.

Releated Posts

OpenAI Says It Will Let Users Add Trusted Contacts to Alert If They Experience a Mental Health Crisis While Using ChatGPT

As it fights a growing stack of user safety and wrongful death lawsuits, OpenAI says it will introduce…

Mar 4, 2026 5 min read

Humongous Numbers of People Are Uninstalling ChatGPT as Anti-OpenAI Sentiment Surges

This is one PR hit that’ll be hard to come back from. After OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced…

Mar 4, 2026 3 min read

Government Handing Out Cash Bonuses to Drug Researchers Who Rush Through Regulatory Approvals

Not even a year after the US Food and Drug Administration announced it was using generative AI to…

Mar 4, 2026 2 min read

Lead Investor in Music Generation App Suno Deletes Tweet That Contradicts Its Argument in High Stakes Court Cases

As music streaming services continue to be overwhelmed by a tidal wave of AI slop, companies facilitating the…

Mar 3, 2026 5 min read