
Canva brings its design suite to ChatGPT with MCP server launch
Canva has become the first design platform to integrate its full creative tools into ChatGPT, marking a significant milestone in AI-powered productivity.
The launch includes two major tools: a deep research connector for ChatGPT and the Canva Model Context Protocol (MCP) server, enabling AI agents to access and generate Canva content in real time, said the company in a press release.
The deep research connector allows users to interact with their past Canva designs directly within ChatGPT. In this way, the feature streamlines creative workflows without switching platforms, from summarising presentations to generating templates.
Canva's AI integration is already gaining momentum – usage of Canva GPT has increased 375 per cent year-over-year, making it one of ChatGPT's most-used productivity tools.
The second innovation, the MCP server (which is a tool that helps AI models better understand and share data with applications), introduces a backend system that gives AI assistants secure, real-time access to a user's Canva workspace. Unlike traditional APIs, the MCP server continuously shares relevant information between the AI assistant and Canva. This enables the assistant to generate better content faster based on ongoing conversations and past designs.
With these tools in place, AI assistants can autofill templates, generate charts with formatted data, and import files from links – all without leaving the chat. The result is more fluid and offers an intelligent design experience.
'We're embedding Canva directly into the AI tools people use every day so they can brainstorm, create, and publish content faster,' said Anwar Haneef, GM and Head of Ecosystem at Canva. 'This is a major step in our vision to make the complex simple.'
All interactions are protected by Canva Shield, the company's AI trust and safety framework. Users and developers can begin integrating Canva's capabilities into their AI tools through the Canva Developers community.
(This article has been curated by Arfan Jeelany, who is an intern with The Indian Express)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
an hour ago
- NDTV
"Broken Into Our Home": OpenAI Officer On Meta Poaching AI Talent
United States: Mark Zuckerberg and Meta are spending billions to recruit top artificial intelligence talent, triggering debates about whether the aggressive hiring spree will pay off in the competitive generative AI race. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently complained that Meta has offered $100 million bonuses to lure engineers away from his company, where they would join teams already earning substantial salaries. Several OpenAI employees have accepted Meta's offers, prompting executives at the ChatGPT maker to scramble to retain their best talent. "I feel a visceral feeling right now, as if someone has broken into our home and stolen something," Chief Research Officer Mark Chen wrote in a Saturday Slack memo obtained by Wired magazine. Chen said the company was working "around the clock to talk to those with offers" and find ways to keep them at OpenAI. Meta's recruitment drive has also landed Scale AI founder and former CEO Alexandr Wang, a Silicon Valley rising star, who will lead a new group called Meta Superintelligence Labs, according to an internal memo, whose content was confirmed by the company. Meta paid more than $14 billion for a 49 percent stake in Scale AI in mid-June, bringing Wang aboard as part of the acquisition. Scale AI specializes in labeling data to train AI models for businesses, governments, and research labs. "As the pace of AI progress accelerates, developing superintelligence is coming into sight,' Zuckerberg wrote in the memo, which was first reported by Bloomberg. "I believe this will be the beginning of a new era for humanity, and I am fully committed to doing what it takes for Meta to lead the way," he added. US media outlets report that Meta's recruitment campaign has also targeted OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, Google rival Perplexity AI, and the buzzy AI video startup Runway. Seeking ways to expand his business empire beyond Facebook and Instagram, Zuckerberg is personally leading the charge, driven by concerns that Meta is falling behind competitors in generative AI. The latest version of Meta's AI model, Llama, ranked below heavyweight rivals in code-writing performance on the LM Arena platform, where users evaluate AI technologies. Meta is integrating new recruits into a dedicated team focused on developing "superintelligence" -- AI that surpasses human cognitive abilities. 'Mercenary' approach Tech blogger Zvi Moshowitz believes Zuckerberg had little choice but to act aggressively, though he expects mixed results from the talent grab. "There are some extreme downsides to going pure mercenary... and being a company with products no one wants to work on," Moshowitz told AFP. "I don't expect it to work, but I suppose Llama will suck less." While Meta's stock price approaches record highs and the company's valuation nears $2 trillion, some investors are growing concerned. Institutional investors worry about Meta's cash management and reserves, according to Baird strategist Ted Mortonson. "Right now, there are no checks and balances" on Zuckerberg's spending decisions, Mortonson noted. Though the potential for AI to enhance Meta's profitable advertising business is appealing, "people have a real big concern about spending." Meta executives envision using AI to streamline advertising from creation to targeting, potentially bypassing creative agencies and offering brands a complete solution. The AI talent acquisitions represent long-term investments unlikely to boost Meta's profitability immediately, according to CFRA analyst Angelo Zino. "But still, you need those people on board now and to invest aggressively to be ready for that phase" of generative AI development. The New York Times reports that Zuckerberg is considering moving away from Meta's Llama model, possibly adopting competing AI systems instead.


Scroll.in
2 hours ago
- Scroll.in
US-India trade deal being finalised, will be announced soon, says White House
A trade deal between India and the United States is close to being finalised and will be announced soon, ANI quoted White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt as having said on Monday. The statement came days before the 90-day suspension of tariffs announced by United States President Donald Trump is set to end on July 9. 'I just spoke to our secretary of commerce about it [India-US trade deal],' Leavitt said during a press briefing. 'He was in the Oval office with the president. They are finalising these agreements.' She added that an announcement from Trump and his trade team is expected 'very soon'. Trump's so-called reciprocal tariffs imposed on several countries, including a 26% 'discounted' levy on India, took effect on April 9. Hours later, however, Trump had reduced the rates on imports from most countries to 10% for 90 days to provide time for trade negotiations. The US president had repeatedly said he intended to impose a reciprocal tax on India, among others, citing high tariffs the countries impose on foreign goods. The tariffs had led to concerns of a broader trade war that could disrupt the global economy and trigger recession. The Indian government has said that it is in talks with Washington to finalise a bilateral trade agreement between September and November. An Indian team led by Union Minister of Commerce Piyush Goyal had visited the US in May to negotiate a trade agreement. Following this, a US team of negotiators was in India for a week earlier this month. On Friday, Trump had said that New Delhi could sign a ' very big ' trade deal with Washington. Leavitt on Monday called India a ' very strategic ally ' of the US in the Indo-Pacific region. Responding to a question about China's influence in the area, Leavitt said: 'India remains a very strategic ally in the Asia Pacific and the President [Donald Trump] has a very good relationship with Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi and he will continue to have that.' 'Would love a big trade pact with US' Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, reacting to Trump's statement on the announcement of the bilateral trade agreement, said on Monday that India would 'love to have an agreement, a big, good, beautiful one', reported The Indian Express. 'At the junction we are in, and given our growth goals and ambition to be Viksit Bharat by 2047, the sooner we have such agreements with strong economies, the better they will serve us,' she told the newspaper. Sitharaman added that agriculture and dairy have been among the 'very big red lines', where a high degree of caution has been exercised, during the talks with the US.


Indian Express
2 hours ago
- Indian Express
OpenAI says it has no plan to use Google's in-house chip
OpenAI said it has no active plans to use Google's in-house chip to power its products, two days after Reuters and other news outlets reported on the AI lab's move to turn to its competitor's artificial intelligence chips to meet growing demand. A spokesperson for OpenAI said on Sunday that while the AI lab is in early testing with some of Google's tensor processing units (TPUs), it has no plans to deploy them at scale right now. Google declined to comment. While it is common for AI labs to test out different chips, using new hardware at scale could take much longer and would require different architecture and software support. OpenAI is actively using Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs), and AMD's AI chips to power its growing demand. OpenAI is also developing its chip, an effort that is on track to meet the 'tape-out' milestone this year, where the chip's design is finalized and sent for manufacturing. OpenAI has signed up for Google Cloud service to meet its growing needs for computing capacity, Reuters had exclusively reported earlier this month, marking a surprising collaboration between two prominent competitors in the AI sector. Most of the computing power used by OpenAI would be from GPU servers powered by the so-called neocloud company CoreWeave. Google has been expanding the external availability of its in-house AI chips, or TPUs, which were historically reserved for internal use. That helped Google win customers, including Big Tech player Apple, as well as startups like Anthropic and Safe Superintelligence, two ChatGPT-maker competitors launched by former OpenAI leaders.