Entertainment
Adobe to offer free app to help with creator attribution amid AI boom
Adobe said on Tuesday (Oct 8) it will offer a free web-based app starting next year, aimed at helping the creators of images and videos to get credit for their work used in AI systems. Since 2019, Adobe and other technology companies have been worki
Adobe said on Tuesday (Oct 8) it will offer a free web-based app starting next year, aimed at helping the creators of images and videos to get credit for their work used in AI systems.
Since 2019, Adobe and other technology companies have been working on what the firms call "Content Credentials", a sort of digital stamp for photos and videos around the web to denote how they were created.
TikTok, which is owned by China's ByteDance, has already said it will use Content Credentials to help label AI-generated content.
San Jose, California-based Adobe said it will offer a free service to allow the creators of photos and videos to affix Content Credentials to their work.
In addition to indicating that they authored the content, the creators can also use the free app to signal if they do not want their work to be used by AI training systems that ingest huge amounts of data, the company said.
The use of data in AI training systems has sparked legal responses in multiple industries, with publishers such as the New York Times suing OpenAI, while some other firms have opted to work out licensing deals.
Since 2019, Adobe and other technology companies have been working on what the firms call "Content Credentials", a sort of digital stamp for photos and videos around the web to denote how they were created.
TikTok, which is owned by China's ByteDance, has already said it will use Content Credentials to help label AI-generated content.
San Jose, California-based Adobe said it will offer a free service to allow the creators of photos and videos to affix Content Credentials to their work.
In addition to indicating that they authored the content, the creators can also use the free app to signal if they do not want their work to be used by AI training systems that ingest huge amounts of data, the company said.
The use of data in AI training systems has sparked legal responses in multiple industries, with publishers such as the New York Times suing OpenAI, while some other firms have opted to work out licensing deals.