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Known Participant
February 11, 2024
Answered

There should be a report button for Images with glaring technical problems

  • February 11, 2024
  • 5 replies
  • 987 views

I see people complaining all the time for their images getting rejected for even the smallest issues, yet I stumble on photos like this one who are approved already, and up for sale. How is this even possible for this photo to have passed the screening of approval from a mod? Look at these nonsensical anatomical monstrosities, not to mention the scrambled pixels to form a mutated shape for a hand. This gives the AI stock a really bad rep especially for us who post highly curated AI stock, and ultimately is bad rep for Adobe Stock. Custommers don'tdeserve these monstrosities. I wish there was a button to ereport such glaringly defective images accompanied with a reason for it, because this is embarrasing.

(To respect the privacy of the person who posted this photo I haven't included the name or stock image number)

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Contributor1

Hello @Geisard, I've sent these details to be reviewed internally. Thank you for the report and sorry for the problem with the image quality.

5 replies

Abambo
Community Expert
February 12, 2024
quote.(To respect the privacy of the person who posted this photo I haven't included the name or stock image number)

By @Geisard

There is no privacy on publicly posted pictures. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Abambo
Community Expert
February 11, 2024

You can file that as a bug on the stock forum: https://community.adobe.com/t5/stock/ct-p/ct-stock?page=1&sort=latest_replies&filter=all&lang=all&tabid=bugs

 

No need to do that now, however, as @daniellei4510 did tag @Contributor1 !

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Contributor1Community ManagerCorrect answer
Community Manager
February 12, 2024

Hello @Geisard, I've sent these details to be reviewed internally. Thank you for the report and sorry for the problem with the image quality.

Abambo
Community Expert
February 11, 2024

That's creepy. Would fit well my next horror movie. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
daniellei4510
Community Expert
February 11, 2024

By all means, report the asset number here and Adobe will look into the issue. Presently, this is the only means possible to report these assets and such issues are reported here regularly. These were most likely accepted either in error if accepted recently or when Adobe was initially inundated with AI submissions and moderators were overwhelmed with thousands of submissions.

Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.
GeisardAuthor
Known Participant
February 11, 2024

Yes. That user also has a bunch of ridiculous photos that are accepted lol 

Ars_Nova
Inspiring
February 12, 2024

I don't think I've ever seen such a perfectly flawed AI image.  No wonder it got accepted, "A group of middle-aged African American friends laughing at a levitating glass of wine" is the new niche, haven't you heard?

Jill_C
Community Expert
February 11, 2024

Indeed, this image is a mess ! If you include the asset number here, we can possibly get an Adobe staff member to refer it back to the Moderation team for review. Adobe does not provide an easy button to report defective assets due to the very real risk of it being abused. I suppose they also want to avoid the extra workload on their moderation team of having to review every such report. Eventually, this flawed images just sink into oblivion because no one will buy them.

Jill C., Forum Volunteer
GeisardAuthor
Known Participant
February 11, 2024