Tech and AI‘This is fine’ creator says AI startup stole his...

‘This is fine’ creator says AI startup stole his art

-


You’ve seen this comic before: An anthropomorphic dog sits smiling, surrounded by flames, and says, “This is fine.”

It’s become one of the most durable memes of the past decade, and now AI startup Artisan seems to have incorporated it into an ad campaign — an ad for which KC Green, the artist who created the comic, said his art was stolen.

A Bluesky post seems to show an ad in a subway station featuring Green’s art, except the dog says, “[M]y pipeline is on fire,” and an overlaid message urges passersby to “Hire Ava the AI BDR.”

Quoting that post, Green said he’s “been getting more folks telling me about this” and that “it’s not anything [I] agreed to.” Instead, he said the ad has “been stolen like AI steals,” and he told followers to “please vandalize it if and when you see it.”

When TechCrunch sent Artisan an email asking about the ad, the company said, “We have a lot of respect for KC Green and his work, and we’re reaching out to him directly.” In a follow-up email, the company said it had scheduled time to speak with him.

Artisan has courted controversy with its ads before, specifically with billboards urging businesses to “Stop hiring humans” — although founder and CEO Jaspar Carmichael-Jack insisted that the message was about “a category of work,” not “humans at large.”

“This is fine” first appeared in Green’s webcomic “Gunshow” in 2013, and while he hasn’t disavowed the smiling-melting dog entirely (he recently turned the comic into a game), it’s clearly escaped from his control.  And of course, Green is far from the only artist to see his meme-able art used in ways he finds objectionable.

Techcrunch event

San Francisco, CA
|
October 13-15, 2026

But some artists have still taken action when their art is monetized or used in commercial ways without their permission, for example when cartoonist Matt Furie sued right-wing conspiracy theory site Infowars for using his character Pepe the Frog in a poster. (Furie and Infowars eventually settled.)

Green told TechCrunch via email that he will be “looking into [legal] representation, as I feel I have to.” Still, he said it “takes the wind out of my sails” that he has to take “time out of my life to try my hand at the American court system instead of putting that back into what I am passionate about, which is drawing comics and stories.”

Green added, “These no-thought A.I. losers aren’t untouchable and memes just don’t come out of thin air.”

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.



Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

Bitcoin critic Warren Buffett warns crypto traders on risky bets

Warren Buffett used the 2026 Berkshire...

MicroStrategy dilutes its shareholders to buy more bitcoin

MicroStrategy failed to outperform BTC this weekend as its share price and NAV premium came nowhere close to...

Olivia Rodrigo tries to make her ex jealous in this SNL sketch

Everyone has at least one bad breakup they'd rather forget. For Olivia Rodrigo's character Saturday night, that breakup...

Advertisement

Michael Saylor is throwing a bitcoin party for NYE, and you’re not invited

For years, Michael Saylor has promised a ‘very expensive’ party to celebrate BTC hitting $100K. He will host...

Best Travel Tote Bags for Every Kind of Excursion (2026): Away, Le Pliage, Topo Designs

Compare Top 6 Travel TotesMore Travel Totes I RecommendLongchamp Large Le Pliage Tote for $180: This bestseller is...

Must read

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you