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Furious AI Users Say Their Prompts Are Being Plagiarized

Joe Wilkins

created: Jan. 10, 2026, 3 p.m. | updated: Jan. 20, 2026, 2:36 p.m.

Other people were “plagiarizing” her unique AI prompts. “‘Make your own prompts’ isn’t advice. And no, this… — Amira Zairi (@azed_ai) January 6, 2026While Zairi is only the latest AI hound to bark about stolen prompts, she’s certainly not the first. 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. “Hope that helps.”More on AI: AI Researchers Say They’ve Invented Incantations Too Dangerous to Release to the Public

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