![]() And they’re calling it ‘ethical’ AI.”Īdobe Stock creators also say Adobe has not been transparent. “You just keep uploading your images and you get your residuals every month and life goes on - then all of a sudden, you find out that they trained their AI on your images and on everybody’s images that they don’t own. “Back then, no one was thinking about AI,” said Urquhart, who joined Adobe Stock in 2012 and has several thousand images on the platform. ![]() “I don’t recall receiving an email or notification that said things are changing, and that they would be updating the terms of service,” he said.Īccording to Eric Urquhart, a Connecticut-based artist who has a day job as a matte artist in a major animation studio, artists who joined Adobe Stock years ago could never have anticipated the rise of generative AI. He said he didn’t receive any notice that Adobe was training an AI model. “Even though they may legally be able to do that, because we all signed the terms of service, I don’t think it is either ethical or fair.” “They’re using our IP to create content that will compete with us in the marketplace,” he said. ![]() He told VentureBeat over Zoom that he has been using Adobe products since he was 14 years old, and has contributed over 2,000 images to Adobe Stock. You can find those terms here.”) Adobe Stock creators say it is unethical to train Firefly using their IPĭean Samed is a UK-based creator who works in Photoshop image editing and digital art. According to PetaPixel, Adobe Stock is currently the only major stock website accepting AI image submissions from contributors - including those generated in non-Firefly tools - and AI images are outperforming human-generated files on the site on many metrics (An Adobe spokesperson says “Adobe Stock respects the rights of third parties and requires all Stock contributors to comply with our terms, including those specific to the use of generative AI tools. In addition, a flooding of gen AI images into Adobe Stock is cannibalizing the platform, the creators say. Photoshop users generated over 150 million images in just the first two weeks using the new generative fill feature powered by Firefly. According to Adobe, since its launch in March, Firefly beta users have generated over 200 million images using a variety of newly available tools and features such as text-to-image, generative fill and extend image. Now, Adobe Stock creators say Firefly’s popularity is making it far less likely that users will purchase stock images. ![]()
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