• TechNerdWizard42@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    At this rate my owned outright copy of Adobe that requires no internet access, with hacks, will become a generational heirloom I can pass down to descendants with immersurable value.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      Don’t pirate anything you use professionally. You are just begging for a lawsuit and to be treated as radioactive in the industry.

      • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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        6 months ago

        owned outright copy

        It’s not piracy if you bought the software and own a permanent license to it.

          • 4am@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            See, this is the issue; it’s not illegal to turn off my internet, it’s not illegal to block a program from accessing it, and it’s not illegal to run software i paid for.

            If that’s a problem to clients then find better clients.

              • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                Seconding the request for a shred of precedent for the things 4am mentioned being grounds for litigation

                • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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                  6 months ago

                  That… isn’t how these kinds of things work?

                  If there is legal precedent, it is a no brainer. That is why you don’t use pirated software. https://www.technicalactiongroup.ca/these-companies-used-pirated-software-and-lost-millions-of-dollars/ is a random source i found that listed a bunch of legal cases.

                  But if we are in a grey area based on whatever vague “with hacks” nonsense was going on?

                  Company sends you a C&D because they decided what you are doing is piracy. They basically say “Give us money and we won’t go to court”. So you either give them money or try to go to court. At which point… setting aside a bit of money for a lawyer would have been a good idea. Wonder where that great advice came from.

                  The legal system in most countries (arguably all but I am sure there is a weird niche case) is inherently going to favor the large corporation with a team of lawyers on retainer. Which lets them more or less bully individuals and smaller companies to settle out of court which means that precedent is never actually established. That is where emulation generally lives, for example.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            6 months ago

            No, it isn’t. Hacking means doing something to it to fix a problem. Maybe that’s telling it to ignore an OS version check or something. That’s not illegal and it’s not piracy. You’re allowed to modify software you own. Even if the hack is removing DRM, it still isn’t piracy if you own it. It’s piracy to give it to other people who don’t own it.

            • mPony@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              You’re allowed to modify software you own

              Companies have convinced people that exerting control over things they have purchased is still illegal if the company could make even more money from them. This attitude is a cancer on society.

            • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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              6 months ago

              The legality of modding, “modding”, and cracking software is still very grey. Arguably intentionally so. Because no company wants to risk a negative ruling and most users aren’t dumb enough to go to court with a fortune 500.

              If the above user was really talking about just putting a new splash screen on Photoshop 1.5 from 10 years ago (… actually it would probably be closer to 20 or 30 at this point? Damn…)? Sure… but that is also the territory where using gimp or krita or paint.net in production is a much better idea.

              But if those “hacks” are to increment versions or allow for plugins made for later versions of photoshop et al to run? That is where you are adding features you never paid for and where you start needing to be ready to cover your ass if you are profiting off of it because now you are “worth” suing.

              And… good luck convincing a judge/jury when your argument is anywhere near as shakey as half the justifications for using pirated software in production in this thread are (I especially love the person who apparently feels that it is the company’s responsibility to sit down with you and explain the license agreement you are… agreeing to).


              Learning a skill or even software? Pirate that shit. There is a reason companies like autodesk have REALLY good “free” versions of their software.

              Running a smaller patreon and doing light gig work? You are starting to get into the danger zone but can probably get away with it because “nobody will ever know” so long as you aren’t dumb enough to upload the project files.

              But once you start working for a “real” company or even reach “small business” levels of youtube? Now you need to actively hide what you are doing because that is the range where some bored person at Company X might look up in the database if you or your company have a license. And for the bigger companies? They might actively be working with Company X to iterate on features for a new release. And… That is also when you have enough money or exposure to be worth getting a C&D and told that you should settle and send them a large sack of cash.

              Would you win the lawsuit? I… sincerely doubt it but we are also clearly in fantasy land in this thread and I am not going to bother to try to explain why “But I want it” won’t hold up. But… yeah.

          • GreatDong3000@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            If you bought photoshop back when it was not subscription and Adobe did not inform you that your license had an expiration date you can in fact do whatever the duck you want to it because you purchased it, you did not rent it, you did not subscribe. You purchased it and it is yours for life.

            Matter of fact you have no idea if what you are suggesting would fly in court because I am pretty sure you don’t know about any previous case like this that has been even tried in court.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          6 months ago

          If the software doesn’t run?

          Yeah. You do. Because unless your company sends you a written email saying to go grab this off the pirate bay, then it is your ass on the line, not theirs.

          And if they DO send that email? Document everything and run away as fast as you can.

          • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            That’s very nice in theory, but in real life you can either do your job by any means or find another one. And if you can’t find another one you just do what you have to do.

            • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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              6 months ago

              With all due respect:

              You are a fucking moron if you put yourself at legal or financial risk for your employer. And that is what you are doing when you are using pirated software or other license misuse in a professional environment. Because you know what happens when Mathworks says “What the fuck? Why are we getting pings from the student version of Matlab at Innertrode?”? Your boss says “Oh shit. It must be Johnson. He went against our express instructions and this is a fireable offense”

              And then you are fired and your boss doesn’t give a shit. Except you are also now the talk around the water cooler because you are a thief and you risked everyone else’s jobs in the process. Which tends to bode poorly when your former co-workers are on or near hiring committees at future jobs.

              And if it was egregious enough that Mathworks is pissed? Guess what? Your company that you are willing to ride or die for is going to throw you to the wolves and do everything they can to get those fines on you because YOU were violating corporate policy.

              If you can’t do your job without putting yourself at legal or financial risk then you won’t have a job for long. So rather than increase your risk until you get fired, start quiet quitting and interviewing elsewhere before the rest of the company gets sacked.

              • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                So I’m between guaranteed getting fired from not doing my work or maybe fired if someone finds out. Guess I’m the moron for choosing the former.

                • null@slrpnk.net
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                  6 months ago

                  If your employer fires you for not pirating software on their behalf, you just stumbled into the easiest lawsuit of your life.

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        In a world long gone you could buy a physical copy of a program and black list it from your internet connection. And it didn’t care, it just did it’s thing. No hacking or Piracy needed, just legacy software.

  • Drunemeton@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Holy Shitballs:

    Sam Santala

    Jun 5

    Also, hilarious that I can’t even get ahold of your support chat to question this unless I agree to these terms beforehand.

    Jun 5

    I can’t even uninstall Photoshop unless I agree to these terms?? Are you fucking kidding me??

    Jun 5

    Realising I also need to agree to the terms if I want to sign in and cancel my subscription

    16h

    Can someone there give me an email for someone who can cancel my subscription without having to sign in and agree to these new terms first?

    • aname@lemmy.one
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      6 months ago

      Realising I also need to agree to the terms if I want to sign in and cancel my subscription

      I’m pretty sure this is not legal in EU

    • magiccupcake@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I think at that point I’d mail a certified letter and cancel whatever card it’s on.

      That probably wouldn’t work but one can dream.

        • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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          6 months ago

          And if you have a decent credit card, and a record of your attempts to contact them and cancel your subscription, they’ll likely take your side if you back charge then block them from your card.

      • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        This is why vendors should send us a public address to pay, instead of us sending them a private address to charge.

      • Konala Koala@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        What about sending a certified letter to the company in question stating they better reverse the idiotic decision or be prepared to face a lengthy prison sentence for it?

  • tabular@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Same choice as normal: whine about and then tolerate a change you don’t want in proprietary software rather than spend time learning to use a software-freedom-respecting alternative.

    “But my workflow”.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      Hey, a lot of people have deadlines and can’t just drop everything to spend a week learning if GIMP even meets their needs when Adobe is knocking their door down with this EULA change right the fuck now

      And Adobe is counting on that. They knew this was bullshit and people would be made which is why the dropped it with (what seems like) zero warning

      • tabular@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        No hard feelings towards people who couldn’t, or didn’t, see this sort of thing coming.

        • MalachaiConstant@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I saw this coming and switched to GIMP and Inkscape. It’s been a pain but I’ve managed. I’m just the IT guy though, and I would be laughed out of the room if I suggested our marketing team consider making the same switch.

          It’s not a matter of seeing it coming. They just don’t care.

          • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Marketing won’t switch because GIMP and Inkscape simply aren’t as capable as PS currently. I hate Adobe, but they have professionals by the short hairs because all of the current competition is simply not competition at all for professional use.

          • tabular@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            No one has an unlimited tolerance to being mistreated. They will care at some point because it can, and will, get worse. It’s just of question of if people discover what is happening or if they carry on oblivious.

    • PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      A lot of us should be considering graphite.rs Once it has raster support, which is in the pipeline, it is shapingshaping up to be a pretty good UI compared to GIMP.

  • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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    6 months ago

    The question I’d like to ask them is WHY they want to get involved in Content Moderation. They make a toolset, nothing more, so why do they care what someone is using the tools for? What could they possibly get out of this that makes it worth the time or expense?

    • Jordan117@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I imagine it’s because of the generative AI stuff. If they’re using their servers to generate, they’re going to be responsible for what it puts out, even if it’s just responding to user prompts.

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        6 months ago

        As someone who’s used their tooling and the generative tooling… I have to admit trying to push its limits for giggles. It is VERY conservative already so I don’t see why they’d need additional moderation privileges.

        This is an awful change.

        • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I tried using their generative tools a while back and they were pretty terrible. Curious what your experience has been.

          • thatsnothowyoudoit
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            6 months ago

            The illustrator tools are terrible. But removing and replacing backgrounds in Photoshop has been spectacular with one caveat - they are less great if you give it any instruction. If you use the generative fills with prompts the results are not at all great. However, if you leave the prompt blank it does a bang-up job matching the existing background set / scene.

            Equally impressive has been generating parts of photos that are missing when extending the canvas size.

            It tends to work best with photos that are “inside” (interiors) with strong geometric cues - but it has expertly matched lighting, backgrounds and their level of focus (or lack thereof).

            • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              Thanks for the insight, I was using it to create something new from a prompt, so my bad experience seems to align with yours.

    • thehatfox@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      The content is being uploaded to Adobe’s servers, they likely have the right and may even be legally required to moderate it to some degree.

      This yet another reminder that the cloud is just somebody else’s computer. Somebody who might want to impose some degree of control with what is done with their computer, for whatever reason.

  • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    People complain now, but they’ll renew their subscription. It’s the same unhealthy relationship people have with Windows.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      6 months ago

      It is my understanding a lot of people maintain their unhealthy relationship with Windows as a prerequisite for keeping their unhealthy relationship with Adobe.

      To be fair, the FOSS community in this area has categorically failed. GIMP’s mission statement is 1. be hateful to use and 2. be capable of editing photographs I guess. Inkscape can’t support CMYK colorspaces so just forget it if there’s an outside chance if it’s going to be printed, Krita can’t draw a circle, Pinta crashes every other thing…hell I wonder if Adobe pays the GIMP team to keep it unusable.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.de
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        6 months ago

        GIMP’s mission statement is 1. be hateful to use

        It hurts to say but you’re right. I was like “can’t you remap the right mouse button to another tool? Everything in the context menu is in the Menu bar regardless” and they responded with “nope, design philosophy”

      • pyre@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        yep. I feel like FOSS projects are always made by code monkeys who have no design sensibilities and designers do not touch any of these. a lot of them are not only unusable but uninstallable by the majority of the intended user base. whenever i find something i want to use it’s like:

        —cool software. can i double click on an icon and have it ready to use?
        —umm, don’t be ridiculous, normie. you gotta self host it and use the command line to enter some arcane incantations obviously. alternatively you can use these other methods you’ve never heard of. if you need any help you can refer to their respective indecipherable documentation.
        —ok I’ll keep what i have until i find something that’s made for regular human beings, thanks.

        • thehatfox@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          A lot of open source graphics software is made by programmers who also need to edit images sometimes. Both the lack of UI polish and featureset choices make more sense when looked at from that angle.

          However, a lot of the criticism that gets thrown at these programs is also a bit unfounded. I regularly see people dunking on GIMP for not being a pixel-perfect clone of Photoshop for free. There is more than one way to design an image editor, and inability of some to learn another is really a user issue. GIMP could be better, but it still can and should be GIMP.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            6 months ago

            GIMP has a well deserved reputation for responding to “this is not nice to use” with “Good!” There are lots of ways to design image editors, sure. Many of those ways are awful.

            Blender used to suck, too. Then they made a decision to improve. Which GIMP is bound and determined not to do. So it needs to go in the box with HURD and someone needs to do better from scratch.

          • AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            The last time I used pjotoshop was on a relatively new Mac II. I’ve also never had issues with Gimp for some reason.

        • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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          6 months ago

          Many FOSS projects have asked that Designers get involved.

          The only project with serious designers I know of are Gnome and Krita.

      • Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Martin Owens is working on CMYK support for Inkscape as we speak, and Gimp releases v3 during the summer if all goes well. Still, they’re small projects with very limited funding. Help them !

      • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I use these tools everyday. Yes there are limitations, but for what MOST people need there are solutions. It just depends on what is important to you. Also, you can use the ellipse assistant.

    • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Because we, the individuals, do not have the power to change it with an individual boycott and need to keep our livelihood intact. Go try to break you unhealthy relationship with petroleum.

      • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        This is actually an excellent comparison. I don’t own a car, and I advocate for the car free lifestyle. I also don’t recommend people using Adobe if possible.

        • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          A car is far from the only consumer of petroleum. Many electrical grids directly use hydrocarbons, construction uses petroleum, public transportation uses petroleum, local shipping uses petroleum, overseas shipping uses petroleum, manufacturing uses petroleum, plastic is made from petroleum, farms run on petroleum… Sure, most of those industries are trying to convert energy sources, but in no way can an individual avoid petroleum consumption and still live. Avoiding windows and Adobe is less insurmountable, but still a powerful stressor for people just trying to make a living.

          • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            This also matches my comparison.

            Maybe someone who makes the GIMP uses photoshop. I actively don’t, and I recommend that others stop using it.
            Maybe someone who delivers my food uses petroleum. I actively don’t, and I recommend that others stop using it.

            All these elements influence my decisions. If you want to continue promoting Adobe and Big Oil, that’s on you.

              • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                My desktop was given to me by my job. My laptop, I rode a bicycle to my friends house and paid him cash. What does that have to do with my promotion of being Adobe free?

                • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  You really are hands-off on this petroleum situation. You’ve got no part in it. It’s official. Everything in your life is a bike ride away and therefore didn’t use petroleum to get to your locality and didn’t take any to be manufactured. You won

    • kandoh@reddthat.com
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      6 months ago

      I need it for work. It’s the industry standard and when I share files between myself and other designers I could potentially bung up a whole project if I’m using GIMP or Affinity by Serif.

      • AFaithfulNihilist@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Adobe basically invented the SaaS model. It’s not really practical to bootleg most Adobe products anymore either so most people break down and just pay the million dollar a year subscription fee so they can keep using it.

  • Aux@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Ok, time to notify our design team not to use any Adobe products anymore and notify the commercial team to stop paying for licences.

    • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      What can you replace Adobe with? Serious question. I despise Adobe, but every alternative I’ve tried throughout the years either cannot do the job or ends up disappearing.

      • Aux@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        It seems our designer team doesn’t really use Photoshop. They switched to Figma from XD and most of their workflows don’t use Adobe software. They still use Illustrator occasionally, but they’re looking at Inkscape atm. If you have Photoshop in your workflow, you’re kinda fucked. https://www.photopea.com/ might be an option, but it’s not a 1:1 replacement. If you need Lightroom, then Darktable is a good alternative. It’s a bit janky here and there, but fully functional and stable. If you’re using Premiere then for fox sake switch to DaVinci Resolve already, it’s so much better than everything else and is free for many workflows and even for commercial use.

      • sweetmartabak@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        While I’ve no idea of your exact needs, I’ve been a happy Affinity customer for almost 3 years now (freelance web dev/designer).

        It has everything I need (vector work, photo editing), and no subscription.

        • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          This is good to hear. It’s been a few years since I last tried to quit Adobe. I will have another go with Affinity and Krita (someone else suggested Krita as well).

  • Plopp@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Canceled my Adobe account in 2018 and they just keep on making my decision a better and better one. Thanks, Adobe!

      • Plopp@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I bought the Affinity Suite which has been great for me. Sadly they don’t have a Linux version, which is what I’m moving to. Krita covers some other of Photoshop’s features as well. And people who say Gimp is a Photoshop alternative are crazy. Gimp uses destructive editing which is clown level in image editing and makes it completely useless imo. But supposedly non-destructive editing is coming.

        • Trail@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          It is destructive in what sense? I’ve been using gimp to do various edits non professionally for many years and I am feeling comfortable with many advanced things, but now I am curious about maybe trying Krita or something.

          I thought using layers and so on in gimp was also considered non destructive… Maybe I am missing out on something.

          I have also used photoshop in like 20 years ago, can’t remember much.

          • Plopp@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Destructive in that many edits are lossy. Change the transform of an object, then go do a bunch of other edits, and then go back and edit that same transform again. What you’ll be editing now is the edited image, not the original one (as in Photoshop), so there’s massive data loss and it looks absolute crap. If you want to edit with the original image as origin you have to undo all edits back to before you edited the transform the first time.

            Non-destructive editing should be coming in the future, and they might have implemented some non-destructive things since I last used it.

            • Trail@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              I tried to read up on it, i understand it in theory, but in practical terms I don’t get what’s the difference to just working with layers…

              I guess I might have to play around a bit with it to get it? I dunno…

              • Plopp@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                Layers aren’t edits, they’re layers. Edits you make to layers or parts of layers. That image whose transform was being edited in my previous example would be on its own layer.

                Also, it’s been a while since I used Gimp so I’m going off of very vague memories that I have tried to erase with copious amounts of alcohol.

              • Trail@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                On second thought, maybe it’s the way I work with layers as well. I tend to keep duplicates of the base image as layers to work with effects and mask them so that I have flexibility with applying them and editing them as needed. Perhaps the benefit of non-desteuctive editing is the same thing as I end up with, but more automated…?

            • whoisthedoktor@lemmy.wtf
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              So wait, if you’re editing the original image, wouldn’t the result just be wrong? I’m genuinely confused. You edit something, you want to change that, you should be changing what to you edited it to, right? Isn’t that the only thing that makes any sense, because if you were editing what you had before, the change you make wouldn’t be right in the context of the new edit?

              And if you want to keep something, this is why we have layers. Which Gimp has and just works. That’s the real way to do “non-destructive editing”.

              Maybe just not understanding how things work in PS because I’ve never used it extensively, but common sense tells me that if you edit something, you want it to look like that and any further edits would be on what you edited it to, not some unknown echo of the past that would interfere with how the image currently looks, which is what you should be editing, right?

              • Plopp@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                You’re right, but you’re missing a key point. Every edit changes the way the image looks. With destructive editing those changes are “baked” into the object you’re changing, and that is data loss. If you want to make a change to that edit you want it to still have the information from the original image so it can be included and changed into the new result you want. Destructive editing doesn’t allow for that. It’s like if you bend a metal wire, you just crumple it up, and then you want to straighten it again - you won’t be able to get it perfectly straight. Non destructive editing does allow for that because it still has the original information, it just doesn’t display it in its original form, it displays it with the edit you’ve made to it, and the edit is “live” so you can change it. It has nothing to do with layers per se, but using layers can be a way to do certain edits in a non destructive way.

                If you don’t grasp the difference just open Gimp and do the transform test. Paste an image into a new layer, change the transform and squish it to the extreme (non uniformly), make it a few pixels wide only. Apply the transform. Change the transform again and pull the image out to its original aspect ratio. You’ll have a blurry image because of all the data that was lost in the first edit. Non destructive editing has been like the most requested feature for Gimp for the past forever for a reason.

      • Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 months ago

        There’s GIMP and Krita as Photoshop alternatives

        Dark Table as a Lightroom alternative

        DaVinci Resolve as a video editor

        Personally giving up Lightroom is the hardest IMO, the others were easy choices.

        Edit: Will add links when I get to my next break at work, no time right now.

  • Grimy@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    This is 100% because they are rolling out more AI features and they want the government to ban all open source competition because they aren’t “safe”.

  • whoisthedoktor@lemmy.wtf
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    6 months ago

    Those reasons being stealing people’s work for AI garbage.

    Fuck Photoshop. Use Gimp and/or Krita.

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        I use Krita professionally on a daily basis, it’s fantastic. It has some rough edges but absolutely nothing that prevents you from having work done. It also beats the Adobe suite hands down when it comes to ergonomy, and the performance with big files is really good (I work on formats up to 14k*7k for print, no issues).

          • Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Yes it does ! I feel bitter because it’s such a waste of good engineering. I’d love it if all these developers just migrated to FOSS projects. I’m sure with the right communication you could secure crowd funding and let Adobe be a thing of the past

      • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I use all 3 for professional work. Might not be good for your job but it’s been great for mine.

        • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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          6 months ago

          First problem, that URL link goes to a dead website for me, which is a major issue given the name of Paint.Net is it’s URL…

          But yeah I mean sure Paint.Net is good in terms of functionality!

          I wouldn’t recommend it over Gimp though, sure Gimp is annoying but Paint.Net is a shovel where as Gimp is a fully featured construction crew with excavators and equipment. Different uses and design goals but the important bit is you can easily ask a construction crew to dig a random hole for you whereas it is much harder to ask a shovel to clear a building site and dig out a pit for a foundation for you… so I tend to recommend familiarizing yourself with Gimp and just skip Paint.Net unless you have a specific need where it fits better.

          Learn Gimp once and use it the rest of your life, shrugs it is the nature of successful Open Source projects like this that after they reach a critical mass of functionality from two decades of development or so there just isn’t a great reason to go with anything else in my opinion (unless you want to drop money on a paid image editor from a company less shitty than Adobe).

          Gimp will be around, being developed and used all over the world long after you are dead. Paint.Net mightttt be if it continues to grow.

        • Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de
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          6 months ago

          Thanks, I’ll give it a go! How’s the denoiser in the software? I’ve really grown fond of LR’s “ai” denoiser. For the most part, ai is bullshit. But it does wonders for denoising. I suppose there are some good standalone applications for that, right? Photography is just a hobby, so I don’t really know much about these things.

          • the_weez@midwest.social
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            6 months ago

            I haven’t used the ai denoiser but the noise reduction in Darktable seems decent to me, has lot’s of options. I am pretty new to raw image manipulation so maybe I’m missing something I don’t know about but it seems fine?

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      I mean… they ARE telling you?

      Expect a LOT more companies to do stuff like this. Because “deep fake” porn is a plague and nobody (reputable) wants their software to be the go to for violating people.

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        6 months ago

        Photoshop != deepfake porn. Although it might get used to touch up some images for realism.

        Which isn’t where the money is in NSFW digital art.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          6 months ago

          Yes. Photoshop is not currently equal to deepfake porn. It is a few popular plugins away from being it though. Hence getting out ahead of things with content policies.

          And… NSFW digital art is not as good money as you think it is. At least, not at the corporate/software level.

            • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              6 months ago

              Artists for furry porn aren’t generally paying for 100+ enterprise licenses. But then, people doing more questionable stuff probably aren’t paying at all so it still doesn’t make sense.

              • EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                6 months ago

                That’s what I was thinking. Deep fakes have existed since photo manipulation was invented, and Adobe hasn’t cared one iota about it before. The only reason I can see for them to care now is if they think they can get in legal trouble for what people create with their products.

            • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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              I mean, have you seen Gadget?

              But also… that is kind of the point. Adobe and basically every company that isn’t a porn company doesn’t care about the revenue from porn. And the companies that DO care about the revenue are constantly fighting piracy.

              There are some patreon-like artists who make bank for getting their Source Film Maker on. But they are a handful of licenses, at best.

              • EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                6 months ago

                That’s what I was thinking. Apart from the porn locked up in the Disney vault, big companies aren’t in the business of making porn. And the companies that do aren’t going to be interested in deep fakes. The people who are using Photoshop to create porn are small fries to Adobe. Deep fake porn has been around as long as photo manipulation has, and Adobe hasn’t cared before.

                Bearing that in mind, I don’t think this policy has anything to do with AI deep fakes or porn. I think it’s more likely to be some new revenue source, like farming data for LLM training or something. They could go the Tumblr route and use AI to censor content, but considering Tumblr couldn’t tell the difference between the Sahara Desert and boobs, I think that’s one fuck up with a major company away from being litigation hell. The only reason that I think would make sense for Adobe to do this because of deep fakes is if they believe that governments are going to start holding them liable for the content people make with their products.

                • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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                  6 months ago

                  I know AI is the big bogeyman right now (and it is especially pertinent to Adobe because the stuff that makes Photoshop and Premier and the like so good are the “AI” tools they have had… for the better part of a decade), but I think there is almost a zero chance that is a factor in this*

                  Because… the big companies care about that. If using Illustrator means that all of their content is being used to train models for their competitors? You can bet that MASSIVE amounts of money would be pumped into Inkscape and the like overnight. Almost as much money as they pump into the lawyers who will own Adobe by the end of the month. Same with Premier and Photoshop and all the other ones.

                  I DO expect Adobe to release something akin to a RAG based tool so that Company A can “save money” by feeding in all of their personal IP as training data to make a semi-personalized model. But there is zero chance that adobe is going ot risk aggregating that themselves.

                  *: Unless the secret is that Adobe wants to develop a service to detect the probability that art was used in the training of a model or even to implement some form of DRM to identify stolen art. Similar to what those god awful NFT models failed to do.

  • manucode@infosec.pub
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    6 months ago

    Isn’t Photoshop by a lot of big corporations. Why would they sign up to that? Or do they get an exemption that isn’t available to private individuals?

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      Sufficiently large orgs probably will be eligible for exemptions under the theory that they are agreeing ahead of time.

      But also? The Adobe suite are just leagues better than anything else in that space. Smaller companies with smaller contracts can get away with, frankly, lesser software. But at scale? You need stuff like the “Oh shit, we should stop calling it AI” plugins. And workflows matter a lot when the vast majority of your applicant pool have been using Adobe software for literally decades.

      A decent number of the tech youtubers have done “We tried to not use Premier for one week” style videos. And they usually end up coming out with “I guess we could maybe make it work but it just isn’t worth it”

      Much like with “this is the year of gaming for linux”, it is going to need massive amounts of grass roots effort to actually focus on UI/UX over “We don’t need that because we are smarter” bullshit. And, eventually, it will be good enough for influencers/taste-makers to give it a chance.

    • Plopp@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Big corporations probably think that since they don’t engage in things that would get moderated it doesn’t matter to them.

  • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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    6 months ago

    If any large organizations want to make a large donation to Inkscape, GIMP, Krita and Blender that would be great.

    • cum@lemmy.cafe
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      6 months ago

      I love FOSS alternatives, but let’s not pretend that GIMP is anywhere near being a viable alternative for professionals, unlike Blender who has got their shit together. I wish GIMP figured out actual decent UX.