The irony of Copilot: manual animation to show off in front of AI

Published on May 21, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Microsoft has sparked debate by unveiling the new animated logo for GitHub Copilot, handcrafted in Blender by designer Cameron Foxley. The generative AI assistant boasts of artisanal work, while its very existence depends on the technology it criticizes. The community is divided between praise for the manual effort and accusations of hypocrisy.

A glowing Blender interface on a monitor displaying a hand-animated 3D logo of GitHub Copilot, a designer’s hand moving a stylus over a drawing tablet, while behind the screen a robotic arm with glowing neural network nodes mimics the same motion, creating a surreal feedback loop, cinematic photorealistic technical illustration, dramatic studio lighting with blue and orange contrast, polished metal surfaces, visible wireframe overlays on the 3D model, digital particle effects floating around the hardware, ultra-detailed workstation with keyboard and mouse, showing the irony of manual craft versus AI automation

Modeling, Rigging, and Threejs: The Process Behind the Animated Octocat 🎨

Foxley detailed that he modeled, rigged, and animated the Octocat mascot cooking, using Blender as the main tool. He then integrated the animation into the web via Threejs, achieving interactivity without resorting to automatic generation. The designer stated that in the era of AI slop, some still make things by hand. This approach highlights the value of manual technical work over automation, although the context raises questions about brand consistency.

Copilot Criticizes AI Slop While Writing Code with AI 🤖

The paradox couldn't be more evident: a tool that automatically generates code boasts about not using AI for a logo. It's like a chef bragging about peeling potatoes by hand while using a robot to cook the rest of the menu. Critics point out that Foxley's message is a communication error, even if the Blender work is flawless. In the end, the controversy ensures more visits than the logo itself.