Hillary Clinton engineered a low-profile start to her campaign. But she's getting some high-profile attention over an unlikely target - her campaign logo.

Thousands of people have weighed in online to mock the simplistic logo. Many pointed out that despite the $1billion Clinton is likely to raise in the 2016 campaign, her campaign graphic looks like it was slapped together in 15 minutes.

'Savvy first move by Hillary. The biggest knock on her is she's too elitist, so she's like, "Boom, let's make the campaign logo in MS Paint,' quipped Aaron Levie, the CEO of tech startup Box.

'So what lucky 3rd grader won the Design the Hillary Clinton Campaign Logo contest?' joked another Twitter user.

Aaron Levie, the CEO of tech startup Box, said Hillary Clinton's new campaign logo looks like it could have been made in MS Paint

One Spanish-speaking user pointed out the similarities between Hillary's logo and the Cuban flag

Mocked: Thousands of people took to social media to mock Hillary Clinton's new campaign logo within hours of her formal announcement she's running for president. Hillary's campaign logo is seen here next to Obama's

New York Times reporter Nate Cohn pointed out that the Hillary logo is similar to a roadside for a hospital

And then came the spoofs and comparisons.

Some said it looked like a highway sign for a hospital. Others pointed out that it vaguely resembled a the FedEx logo. Or the Cuban flag. One commentator suggested it resembled the WWII-era Hungarian fascist party logo.

WikiLeaks, the government secrecy opponents, accused Clinton of ripping off their 'innovative' design.

Perhaps the closest resemblance is the most obscure. Independent Journal Review points out that Clinton's logo looks like one for Hillard's a grocery store chain in the north of England that was bought out by Tesco in the 1980s.

Hillary Clinton announced on Sunday in campaign video that focused on the middle class that she is running for president in 2016

Origins: CNN's Kristie Lu Stout postulated that Hillary's logo was cross between the Fedex Logo - with itss arrow in between 'E' and 'X' - and The Who

One Twitter user joked that the logo could have been made by a third-grader

WikiLeaks accused Hillary Clinton of stealing their Twitter design in her campaign logo. Though both feature right-facing red arrows, the logos do not have much in common

Some have pointed out that the logo looks like the seal for the Hungarian Nazi party (left). The History Channel logo also includes an 'H' and a red arrow (right)

Hillard's for Hillary? The logo for Hillard's, a grocery chain that operated in northern England until the 1980s, looks very similar to Clinton's logo

Not impressed: Critics were surprised that a campaign as big as Hillary's had such a slapdash logo

Even the New Yorker weighed to poke fun at the cartoon: 'I'm just not entirely sure a big red arrow pointing right is the best logo for a democratic candidate, is all,' reads the caption.

The Clinton campaign hasn't commented on the origin or motivation for the logo.

On Sunday afternoon Wikileaks tweeted out accusing Clinton of swiping their insignia for her logo.

'Hillary Clinton has stolen our innovative WikiLeaks twitter logo design,' reads a post from WikiLeak's official Twitter page.

The former Secretary of State, First Lady and New York Senator launched her second presidential campaign on Sunday.

The WikiLeaks tweet offered side-by-side comparisons of the media organization's logo and and Clinton's campaign logo.

The WikiLeaks logo features an hourglass with one earth dripping into the one below with a red arrow next to it.

Clinton's logo shows a red arrow with blue forming a large H around it.

Clinton is not, however, the first politician to be criticized for their logo choices this year.

Distasteful: One mock up of the Hillary logo makes it look like the Twin Towers

Chilly reception: One user said the flag looked like the flag of Iceland

This will be the former Secretary of State, First Lady and New York Senator's second attempt at being elected president. She also ran in 2008

Earlier this year, The Verge accused Rand Paul of swiping Tinder's flame for his Rand Paul Political Action Committee logo.

Both logos feature a flame above their typography.

Clinton's presidential announcement caused a wave of criticism on Twitter, in which several people used the hashtag, #WhyImNotVotingForHillary.

In her announcement on Sunday, Clinton leaned on a message of middle-class rescue and claimed that America's economy is 'still stacked in favor of those at the top,' according to a campaign video.

Rand Paul was accused in March of swiping his logo from the popular dating app Tinder. The logos have similar-shaped flames floating above their typography

'I'm getting ready to do something,' Clinton says in the brief ad, following a series of clips of ordinary-looking Americans describing what they're 'getting ready' for.

'I'm running for president,' she says.

'Everyday Americans need a champion, and I want to be that champion.'

Clinton, 67, becomes the third major figure to announce her US presidential aspirations.

Republican Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul rolled out their campaigns in recent weeks.

Senator Marco Rubio is widely expected to announce his campaign on Monday, and ex-Florida governor Jeb Bush is actively considering a run.