Adobe's Content Authenticity enters public beta, but with some flaws
2 Articles
2 Articles
Adobe's Content Authenticity enters public beta, but with some flaws
Image: Adobe Last week, Adobe announced that it's opening up the beta for its Content Authenticity app, which launched in private beta last year. This means more people will be able to access the tool's features, which let you add secure metadata to an image claiming that you own it and add a flag asking AI companies not to use it to train their models. That should be a good thing. But the current implementation could threaten to muddy the water…
Why I think Adobe's approach to AI is worth supporting
David Wadhwani, president of digital media at Adobe The software giant has got a lot of flack from creatives for its focus on 'ethical' AI. But I'm starting to think they might actually have a point. Last week I was in North Greenwich, London, for Adobe Max, the big conference by the design software giant. Full disclosure: like many of the journalists here, the company has paid my train fare and for me to stay in a nice hotel. At the same time, …
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- There is no tracked Bias information for the sources covering this story.
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage