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Known Participant
November 21, 2024
Answered

Idea: An advanced AI tool that does a preliminary analysis of images as they are sent to you?

  • November 21, 2024
  • 2 replies
  • 1396 views

I want to share an idea with you. If there was an AI review tab next to the Adobe stock review tab. After uploading the image, the AI ​​tool will review it. It will quickly get back to us by marking the errors in the image in red and writing a description. The contributor will re-edit the image according to the error reports it receives and re-upload it. However, an Adobe employee expert will review the image the second time.

Both the workload of the employees will be lightened, and since the contributor receives help, the risk of the image being rejected will decrease, and he/she will not have to do the whole work from scratch.

I had this idea a long time ago. I usually do not want to write because I cannot reach anyone or because it sounds amateur. New AI tools have been added to Adobe stock recently. Maybe such a tool will be implemented. Also, moderators will not be exposed to the question "Why my image was rejected!!!" thousands of times 😄

(I used a translation tool for my message)

Best regards.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Jill_C

People improve themselves over time. Be tolerant of new contributors. There are thousands of contributors on this platform. Not everyone is at the same level. It would be an approach like trying to start from the highest level. You expect mastery from everyone right away.


Adobe's Buyers, therefore Adobe, expect that Contributors display mastery of their craft. There is no accommodation in this business for beginners, because there is no market in Stock for substandard images. I wouldn't go back to the archives of my earliest days with my first DSLR and expect to be able to submit those images to Adobe Stock because I know for a fact that they wouldn't meet the quality criteria. 

2 replies

daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 21, 2024

You're basically talking about ChatGPT. I ran a few of my accepted assets through ChatGPT and, according to the results, none of them would have been accepted. Let's leave such decisions to human moderators.

Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.
Known Participant
November 21, 2024

Wouldn't the tool that Adobe's own software developers would create have its own architecture and different operating logic? For example, Kodak had produced compact discs years ago that were designed solely for storing images. I also thought of asking Chatgpt about the errors in my images, but I thought it wouldn't be successful because it was developed as a language model. I don't know much anyway.

If the tool I mentioned raises concerns that it could put human moderators out of work, don't get me wrong.

daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 21, 2024

Errors such as artifacts, exposure issues, excessive grain, etc., are all things photographers (or AI designers) need to train themselves to become aware of and fix. If one needs AI to point out the obvious, that individual might want to try a different art form or craft.

Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.
Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 21, 2024

You can use existing AI chat programs to analyze your assets. But if it would be so easy to use AI to check assets, Adobe would use it. In a few years, AI will create stock assets and AI will check it. No contributors, no moderators (and probably also no buyers, because AI will take over that part too).

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Known Participant
November 21, 2024

Look, Adobe has already added AI tools to its website. Why not this tool too? Why does the topic always come down to AI taking over everything? We are already living in the midst of this technology.