Frequently Asked Questions About IMGGen
Is IMGGen completely free to use?
Yes—fully functional, no trial period, no credit card required. The free plan includes unlimited background removal, face swap, Ghibli conversion, object erasure, and photo restoration—up to 1080p resolution, with no watermarks or usage caps. Pro plans unlock 4K exports, priority GPU processing, bulk automation APIs, and advanced style variants (e.g., “Ghibli + Watercolor” or “Ghibli + Night Mode”).
What image and video formats does IMGGen support?
Upload: JPG, JPEG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and MP4 (up to 1 minute). Export: PNG (with transparency), JPG, WEBP, MP4 (H.264), and GIF. For video inputs, we auto-detect keyframes and optimize motion rendering—preserving original frame rate while enhancing detail.
How does IMGGen protect my photo privacy?
Your files never leave secure infrastructure. Images are processed in encrypted memory buffers and automatically purged from servers within 90 seconds of export—or immediately after session close. We do not store, index, train on, or share user uploads. All AI inference occurs via ephemeral compute instances with zero persistent storage. Full privacy policy and SOC 2 compliance documentation available on our Trust Center.
Can I use IMGGen for commercial projects?
Absolutely. All edited and generated content belongs solely to you. IMGGen grants perpetual, royalty-free, worldwide license to use outputs in marketing, merchandise, SaaS dashboards, client deliverables, and broadcast media. No attribution required—though we love being tagged! (Terms of Service include clear guidelines for trademarked/logos and biometric data handling.)
How realistic is the Ghibli Style Converter?
It’s not mimicry—it’s translation. Trained on annotated frames from 12 Studio Ghibli films and validated by animation historians, the model interprets depth, mood, and storytelling intent. A portrait becomes a character study with expressive eyes and soft bokeh; a cityscape transforms into a layered, hand-crafted diorama with wind-swept trees and atmospheric perspective. Realism comes from fidelity to *artistic intention*, not photorealism—and users consistently report higher emotional resonance in Ghibli-edited content versus generic anime filters.