Yeah, well, no. But these programs have enormous potential for image creation as they continue to improve.
With commercial photography these tools will be able to create realistic images of whatever you want almost instantaneously. It's easy to see how this would be a less expensive alternative to a large scale production in some or all cases in the future. The technology still has a ways to go before it can get there, for example DALLE2 is still horrible at spelling and
writing words. Google's Imagen is still closed to the public but is apparently much better at writing in english.
There's a lot of gray areas around copyright and ethics. Who created the image? Is it the AI, the developer, the source material, the person who writes the prompt? A lot of the arguments against AI imagery - especially as an artistic product - remind me of how painters responded to the creation of photography. And also of Duchamp's Fountain. Writing a prompt to create the image you're after requires creativity and knowledge of how the program works. I'd anticipate many members here to have a very negative reaction to this technology. In response, I would first encourage you to play around with the free tool
Craiyon. It's basic but gives you an idea of what's going on. Then if you're more ambitious, sign up for
DALLE2 and
Midjourney (these typically cost money to use, but include a few images for free). I have been using these programs for a few months and really impressed with the images they produce.