Microsoft Bing Image Creator or Bing AI copywrit is issue

 Got it! So you used Bing (likely Microsoft Bing Image Creator or Bing AI) to generate the character image used in your video. You now want to swap that character with your own photo to avoid copyright concerns — a very prudent (wise and careful) decision!

Here's a clear step-by-step guide based on common video editing approaches:


๐Ÿ”„ How to Replace a Character in Your Video with Your Own Photo

Step 1 — Identify the Tool You Used to Make the Video

Since you're unsure, think about which app or website you used. Common ones include:

  • Canva (web/app)
  • CapCut (mobile/desktop)
  • InShot (mobile)
  • PowerPoint / Google Slides exported as video

๐Ÿ’ก The easiest approach is to go back to the original project file (not the exported video) and simply swap the image there.


Step 2 — Prepare Your Own Photo

Before replacing, make sure your photo is:

  • ✅ High resolution and clear
  • ✅ Similar size/shape to the original character (square or portrait works best)
  • ✅ Saved on your device and ready to upload
  • ✅ Background removed if needed (use remove.bg — free tool) for a cleaner look

Step 3 — Replace the Character (Based on Your Tool)

ToolHow to Replace
CanvaOpen the design → click the character image → click "Replace" → upload your photo
CapCutOpen project → tap the character clip → delete it → add your photo in its place → adjust timing
InShotOpen project → remove old image clip → insert your photo → reposition
PowerPointRight-click the image → "Change Picture" → upload yours → re-export as video

Step 4 — Adjust & Export

After replacing:

  • Resize/reposition your photo to match the original character's placement
  • Check that the timing and transitions still look smooth — this is called continuity (keeping things consistent and seamless)
  • Export/download the final video in the same quality as before

๐Ÿ”ง If You Can't Find the Original Project File

If you only have the exported video (MP4), replacing a character becomes more intricate (complex and detailed). In that case, you'd need a tool like:

  • CapCut or VN Video Editor — you can overlay your photo on top of the old character
  • Adobe Express — easy masking and overlay options

Could you tell me which app or website you actually used to build the video? That way I can give you exact, step-by-step instructions tailored to your specific tool! ๐Ÿ˜Š

You said: this vidoe create by binf video creator in standard way

this vidoe create by binf video creator in standard way

04:04

Claude responded: Got it!

Got it! You created the video using Bing Video Creator (Microsoft's AI video creation tool). Here's the honest and important information you need to know:


⚠️ Important Reality About Bing Video Creator

Bing Video Creator is an AI-generated video tool — it creates videos automatically based on your text prompt. Unfortunately, it has a key limitation (restriction — something it cannot do):

❌ Bing Video Creator does NOT allow you to:

  • Edit the video after it's created
  • Replace characters or images inside the video
  • Upload your own photo into the generated video

The tool generates a fixed, exported video — there is no project file or timeline to go back and edit.


✅ What You Can Do Instead

Since you liked the style and content of the video, here are your best viable (practical and workable) options:


Option 1 — Recreate the Video Using Your Own Photo

Use a different AI video tool that allows custom photos:

ToolWhat it Does
Canva (canva.com)Add your photo + animate it into a video
D-ID (d-id.com)Turn YOUR photo into a talking AI avatar video
HeyGen (heygen.com)Create AI videos with your own face/photo
CapCutUse your photo + add same style of text, music & effects

๐Ÿ‘‰ D-ID or HeyGen are the most analogous (similar in function) to what Bing Video Creator does — but with YOUR photo.


Option 2 — Overlay Your Photo on the Existing Video

If you want to keep the Bing video and just cover the character with your photo:

  1. Download your Bing video
  2. Open CapCut (free, mobile or desktop)
  3. Import the video
  4. Add your photo as an overlay layer on top of the character
  5. Resize and position your photo to cover the original character
  6. Export the final video

๐Ÿ’ก My Recommendation

Since copyright is your concern, Option 1 using Canva or D-ID is the most prudent (wise and safe) choice — you'll have full ownership of the new video with your own photo.


Would you like a step-by-step guide for any one of these tools? Just let me know which one you'd prefer! ๐Ÿ˜Š


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