Perhaps the most tangible aspect of Adobe's commitment to helping users know what's "real" is the Content Authenticity Initiative(opens in new tab) (CAI), which seeks to fight misinformation and add a layer of verifiable trust to all types of digital content. Today, Adobe announced(opens in new tab) that it has partnered with camera manufacturers Leica and Nikon to implement provenance technology directly into their cameras.
Funny, that software expressly designed to fabricate and falsify claims some sort of ownership over the truth.
What they should do is rush to make the best AI tools available in their software before open source obsoletizes them faster than it's already happening.
Exactly. The mods are already out to add ai characters in pictures, it's just difficult to install at the moment. If Adobe doesn't, or worse, tries to stop it, then Gimp wins.
I've dabbled in this AI stuff a bit. Right now it can only really do stuff that other people have already done. It might be able to have very fine image quality, and very fine detail, but at the end of the day it's good for pinups, portraits, and not much else. creatives who actually have something new to bring to the table shouldn't be too worried
Funny, that software expressly designed to fabricate and falsify claims some sort of ownership over the truth.
What they should do is rush to make the best AI tools available in their software before open source obsoletizes them faster than it's already happening.
Exactly. The mods are already out to add ai characters in pictures, it's just difficult to install at the moment. If Adobe doesn't, or worse, tries to stop it, then Gimp wins.
I've dabbled in this AI stuff a bit. Right now it can only really do stuff that other people have already done. It might be able to have very fine image quality, and very fine detail, but at the end of the day it's good for pinups, portraits, and not much else. creatives who actually have something new to bring to the table shouldn't be too worried
What AI stuff?