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In late November 2022, a little-known app called Lensa went from obscurity to everywhere. Celebrities, influencers, and millions of ordinary people uploaded their selfies and got back stunning AI-generated portraits, fantasy warriors, Renaissance paintings, cyberpunk heroes, and more. The app’s viral “MagicAvatars” feature launched in late November and propelled Lensa to the No. 1 spot on the iOS App Store’s Photo & Video charts.
At the center of thefrenzy was a simple pitch: pay a few dollars, upload a handful of selfies, and watch AI turn you into art. But the backlash arrived fast. Critics flagged hypersexualized outputs for women, artist concerns over training data and styleappropriation, and privacy questions about what users were actually agreeing to when they uploaded their faces. Reporting at the time noted that Prisma Labs’ terms allowed the app to use user content to operate or improve the service, and that the company updated its privacy policy in December 2022 amid thecontroversy.
This episode is a story about virality, timing, and the dark incentives hiding inside consumer AI. It’s about how a polished interface, an irresistible social loop, and a moment of cultural hype can turn into an extraordinary revenue machine.
TechCrunch reported that Lensa generated more than $70 million from the app in November 2022 alone, with Sensor Tower data showing the app’s downloads jumping to 1.6 million in November, up 631% from October.
But the bigger question is not whether Lensa was clever. It’s what its success reveals about the AI era: speed can outrun ethics, product can outrun governance, and ordinary users often surrender far more than they realize in exchange for convenience and novelty.
“The following represents my analysis and commentary based on publicly available information and reporting.”
By Rohit Agnihotri5
33 ratings
In late November 2022, a little-known app called Lensa went from obscurity to everywhere. Celebrities, influencers, and millions of ordinary people uploaded their selfies and got back stunning AI-generated portraits, fantasy warriors, Renaissance paintings, cyberpunk heroes, and more. The app’s viral “MagicAvatars” feature launched in late November and propelled Lensa to the No. 1 spot on the iOS App Store’s Photo & Video charts.
At the center of thefrenzy was a simple pitch: pay a few dollars, upload a handful of selfies, and watch AI turn you into art. But the backlash arrived fast. Critics flagged hypersexualized outputs for women, artist concerns over training data and styleappropriation, and privacy questions about what users were actually agreeing to when they uploaded their faces. Reporting at the time noted that Prisma Labs’ terms allowed the app to use user content to operate or improve the service, and that the company updated its privacy policy in December 2022 amid thecontroversy.
This episode is a story about virality, timing, and the dark incentives hiding inside consumer AI. It’s about how a polished interface, an irresistible social loop, and a moment of cultural hype can turn into an extraordinary revenue machine.
TechCrunch reported that Lensa generated more than $70 million from the app in November 2022 alone, with Sensor Tower data showing the app’s downloads jumping to 1.6 million in November, up 631% from October.
But the bigger question is not whether Lensa was clever. It’s what its success reveals about the AI era: speed can outrun ethics, product can outrun governance, and ordinary users often surrender far more than they realize in exchange for convenience and novelty.
“The following represents my analysis and commentary based on publicly available information and reporting.”