Users trying to build animated avatars in the style of Studio Ghibli are also being disrupted by OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which is currently experiencing a worldwide outage. Numerous issues have been reported in both its app and API services. With OpenAI’s most recent update to ChatGPT, users are eagerly sharing their artistic masterpieces on social media, sparking a boom in Studio Ghibli-inspired visual creations.
With the help of the new GPT-4o model, ChatGPT can now produce incredibly accurate and detailed photos, which is a big improvement over its prior DALL-E 3-based capabilities.
‘Resolved’: Open AI Updates
The AI platform announced that “all impacted services have now fully recovered” half an hour after Open AI admitted that ChatGPT was down. Within the next five business days, the comprehensive Root Cause Analysis (RCA) will be made public.

Open AI formally confirmed the problem at 4:40 p.m. on Sunday, March 30, writing, “We are currently experiencing issues,” and “We have identified that users are experiencing elevated errors for the impacted services.” We are in the process of putting a mitigation in place.
The official announcement states that ChatGPT’s online platform is the part of the service that is impacted during the outage. OpenAI posted an update stating, “We are looking into the problem for the listed services.”
DownDetector, an outage tracking website, reports that at least 229 customers expressed dissatisfaction with OpenAI’s service interruption. Approximately 59% of people complained about ChatGPT.
Studio Ghibli-styled Images on ChatGPT
Users all throughout the world have been enthralled by ChatGPT’s debut of company Ghibli-style picture generation, which enables users to turn regular photos into captivating images influenced by the renowned Japanese animation company.
With an update to Chat GPT-4o, OpenAI unveiled its most sophisticated picture generator, enabling users to create graphics in the hand-drawn animation style popularized by Miyazaki in Oscar-winning movies like “Spirited Away” and “The Boy and the Heron.”