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Kevin J. Monahan Jr.
Community Manager
Community Manager
September 24, 2024
Question

Our approach to generative AI with Adobe Firefly

  • September 24, 2024
  • 18 replies
  • 2397 views


Our approach to generative AI with Adobe Firefly

Adobe has created a webpage that outlines our approach to developing the generative AI models behind Adobe Firefly. Our aim is to be clear about what we do and do not do, differentiate our approach from much of the broader industry, and provide an example that can hopefully guide the industry to a more responsible place. Visit the page here.

 

Please reply to this post and let us know what you think. I'm very interested in hearing what you have to say!

 

Thanks,

Kevin

This topic has been closed for replies.

18 replies

AlanGilbertson
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 26, 2024

I bookmarked the page so I could send people the link when I see the paranoia surfacing. It's extraordinary how deeply we are immersed in the "post-truth" world, however. As often as not, the information is rejected out of hand because "everybody knows the Big Bad Corporation is a robber baron."

Tina_Irvine
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 25, 2024

I absolutely love the ethics, and how respectful Adobe is of creators ❤️

Community Expert
October 14, 2024

Clear, concise guidelines that provide reliable information on Adobe's intentions, offering a trustworthy resource for reference.

Sean McCormack
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 10, 2024

Quite clear. Thanks Kevin. 

Sean McCormack. Author of 'Essential Development 3'. Magazine Writer. Former Official Fuji X-Photographer.
Participating Frequently
October 3, 2024

Maybe just a point of note on the layout of this article itself, but all of the expandable talking points seem to overlap. You have the same phrase multiple times about public-domain and licensed content, such as a Adobe Stock. I think that whole accordian section could be re-written in 1–2 really clear paragraphs.

I appreciate the citations to specific sections in the Terms of Service.

@mj
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 4, 2024

I concur

christianot40873293
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 2, 2024

AI is controversial, these doubts always arise, where the images are coming from, whether the artists are being paid, whether they use users' content.

Excellent material, save, I want to do a material about this!

Thanks

Monika Gause
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 1, 2024

This is great information, but I do not think it reaches the heart.

Have you ever thought about making this into a video? With a couple of people in responsible positions talking to users? 

Jess Telmanik
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 2, 2024

I love this idea Monika!

OussK
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 1, 2024

Great, Clear Information

Community Expert
September 30, 2024

It's clear, but I think it should also be highlighted on Adobe's homepage under the AI section so that people can better understand. I still see many people claiming that Adobe is training on their personal private content, without realizing that Adobe would never do that, as bad or junk files would lead to poor results. I would like to see a short link to Adobe that explains how their training process works and what type of content is used. While this clarification helps, many users still misunderstand the terms and conditions and believe Adobe is using their content without permission.

I still see a lot of protests against AI-generated content, and I believe there should be embedded metadata to mark that an image was edited with a Gen-AI tool. However, simple adjustments like color grading or cropping should not trigger this.

Illustrator is open almost 24/7 and just about the same for Bridge and Photoshop
Michael Ambroise
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 28, 2024

Great!

_______Senior graphic designer | United Nations Population Fund