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wallander
Participating Frequently
November 14, 2024
Open for Voting

Refine your content policies, please.

  • November 14, 2024
  • 3 replies
  • 359 views

I asked Firefly to draw an emoji with Donald Trump hair and received a message that this request did not meet Adobe's content requirements. Surely your AI can tell the difference between a silly request like this and a nefarious deepfake, right?

3 replies

Kevin Stohlmeyer
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 15, 2024

In simpler terms Adobe's terms and conditions for usage states that Firefly is not trained on copyrighted/trademarked/public figures to prevent it's misuse. If you wish to generate an image with a public figure like DT, then your best option is to look elsewhere. 

https://www.adobe.com/legal/licenses-terms/adobe-gen-ai-user-guidelines.html

wallander
wallanderAuthor
Participating Frequently
November 15, 2024

I'm not sure I agree with this argument, but I appreciate you taking the time to write a thoughtful reply, @droopydog500.

droopydog500
Community Manager
Community Manager
November 15, 2024

Hello @wallander,

 

Thank you for your feedback. My comments here are my own views, I do not work for Adobe. If you look at the Firefly product from what Adobe wants to accomplish, they want businesses to feel safe using these generative AI tools in business. They have differentiated themselves both in the content they use for training the models and how the models can be used so that businesses using these tools feel they are not being exposed to legal liability by using generated images.

 

In that vein, it is generally safer to use images if you are not generating the likeness of real people. It is not really a parody versus deep fake issue—it is not generating likeness of real people where a business doing that might expose themselves to legal liability. So, for this reason, you cannot generate images of Donald Trump in any form.

My best,

    droopy

Adobe Community Expert (not an Adobe employee)