These assets inadvertently contained elements that resembled real-life applications, leading to “problematic results.”
Levine explained that Figma doesn’t train its AI models on specific content from Apple or other companies. Instead, the tool uses extensive design systems consisting of hundreds of components to generate a variety of designs. The company has since removed assets that appear similar and disabled the feature while it works to “improve its quality assurance process.”
Figma CEO Dylan Field admitted his mistake and took responsibility for the team’s tight deadline. The company plans to relaunch the feature once the identified issues are resolved, but did not specify a specific timeframe.
Source: Ferra

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