No, you keep repeating this but it remains untrue no matter how many times you say it. An image generator is able to create novel images that are not directly taken from its training data. That's the whole point of image AIs.
FaceDeer
The trainers didn't train the image generator on images of Mr. Bean hugging Pennywise, and yet it's able to generate images of Mr. Bean hugging Pennywise. Yet you insist that it can't generate inappropriate images without having been specifically trained on inappropriate images? Why is that suddenly different?
The state of the art for small models is improving quite dramatically quite quickly. Microsoft just released the phi-3 model family under the MIT license, I haven't played with them myself yet but the comments are very positive.
Alternately, just turn that feature off.
Image AIs also don't act or respond on their own. You have to prompt them.
If AI has the means to generate inappropriate material, then that means the developers have allowed it to train from inappropriate material.
That's not how generative AI works. It's capable of creating images that include novel elements that weren't in the training set.
Go ahead and ask one to generate a bonkers image description that doesn't exist in its training data and there's a good chance it'll be able to make one for you. The classic example is an "avocado chair", which an early image generator was able to produce many plausible images of despite only having been trained on images of avocados and chairs. It understood the two general concepts and was able to figure out how to meld them into a common depiction.
Camera-makers, too. And people who make pencils. Lock the whole lot up, the sickos.
Image-generating AI is capable of generating images that are not like anything that was in its training set.
It is entirely possible for both sides of a conflict to be committing war crimes.
The person who was charged was using Stable Diffusion to generate the images on their own computer, entirely with their own resources. So it's akin to a company that sells 3D printers selling a printer to someone, who then uses it to build a gun.