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Adobe's ToS changes could be an AI overreach on user data

appleinsider.com Adobe's ToS changes could be an AI overreach on user data

A new and mandatory terms of service approval for Adobe Creative Cloud requires users agree to the company getting free access to users' projects, for whatever they want to do with it. That's unacceptable.

Adobe's ToS changes could be an AI overreach on user data
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  • Time to switch to Linux 😁👍 (there are plenty of Adobe alternatives for it, although they don't necessarily offer 100% replacements). I'm convinced that Adobe is one of the major reasons that people stick with windows. If worse comes to worse you can run windows on Linux using a virtual machine (and believe you me, if I can do it then you can too).

    • Time to switch to Linux 😁👍 (there are plenty of Adobe alternatives for it,

      Unfortunately this is not really true. I think people who say "just use GIMP" have only ever used PS to open and crop images. Inkscape is also nowhere near Illustrator, and Scribus feels more like QuarkXpress circa 1998 than a viable InDesign replacement.

    • This was very much me, and for a rather stupid reason: My resume was in InDesign.

      It would have served me well to realize InDesign resumes are a bad idea to get past ATS years ago, but I eventually came around.

      I can still fire up CS6 in a VM; for my needs, CC never made sense. Like, seriously, for ID, layers and transparency and trapping and anything else I might need for offset or digital is taken care of. Illustrator has a competent Live Trace feature. Photoshop has the magnetic lasso, which is about as advanced as I need to get past cropping and toning. Audition lets me make really bad mashups.

      The only subscription I have that is not a utility or insurance is Mullvad. I don't want to rent anything on my computer, thank you very much. Yarr!

    • I agree. The problem is there are too many people who make excuses for switching which wouldn’t exist if they just actually switched. Saying the alternatives suck compared to Adobe products…well if everyone stopped using Adobe products today and all switched to the various other software out there that does run on Linux, I guarantee you within a year, they would be all on par with the Adobe products because they would finally have the financial backing necessary to accomplish that goal.

      Adobe still exists simply because they are a behemoth due to existing for 40 years. People have choice, even professionals, even businesses.

      • You know, in the wake of what I like to call "The Snowden Affair," and learning that Microsoft was a PRISM company, I became very interested in using Linux despite being a Windows person (and way way before that a Mac person, but that was pre-mainstream-internet, and I digress). I researched the various Linux flavors and settled, wrongly as it turned out, on Fedora. When I went to install it alongside Windows, I accidentally nuked Windows and was left just with Fedora. But, and here is my point, I learned. I learned sort of how Linux works, that I'm not particularly fond of the command line, and that I hated GNOME. Nevertheless, I persisted, and then I discovered Cinnamon and then Mint, and it's been fine and lovely ever since. Not that I advocate throwing young children into the water to teach them how to swim, but it was out of necessity, and a real anger at PRISM companies, that motivated me to learn, and so I did.

        EDIT: With all this AI data poaching going on, Mrs. Hedge did something which I thought she'd never do, which is to leave Instagram for Pixelfed. She's a Windows person; when Windows 11 comes out, I get the feeling that they too will pull this same scraping bullshit. It's already supposed to record everything you do, right? Might even get the Missus to switch to Linux.

        • That’s awesome! I began my journey while at college in 1999. But I never once fully committed to the Linux desktop on my personal PC until now with all this CoPilot Recall nonsense. I would always have Windows in my back pocket, just in case.

          Not anymore. I’m done with Microsoft and certainly done with Adobe (not that I did much with their software). I’m able to play all the games I want in Garuda (KDE Dragonized) and have had no issues beyond minor tweaking.

          • Hi ulkesh, looks like you might be responding to a comment I deleted because I felt like I was bragging and being too preachy. Anyway, do you use any other flavors of Linux besides Garuda (I had to look it up, I hadn't heard of it!)? How do you like it? And your DE environment of choice is, I guess, KDE?

            • I didn't find it bragging or preachy, btw.

              Right now, because I've basically said good-bye to Windows, I am wanting a distro that caters to gaming. Nobara, Bazzite (though I'm not yet a fan of the "atomic" style distros), and Garuda all seem to deal with this relatively well. Garuda feels more baked than the others at the moment, but Nobara is by the same person who has created and maintained the proton-ge and wine-ge builds (goes by GloriousEggroll) -- so once it is upgraded to Fedora 40 base, I may consider switching, but haven't fully decided.

              I have run Garuda Hyprland and Garuda KDE Dragonized. I loved them both, but I have settled on Garuda KDE Dragonized because it has everything set up out of the box for gaming and I'm more accustomed to that kind of desktop environment. Hyprland was interesting and I enjoyed it mostly, but there were some things that I couldn't easily get past (mainly, I like to minimize/hide windows, and Hyprland's method of that is to just shove the window to another desktop, or quit the app, or hope it has a system tray icon for it and can "minimize" to that).

              If I didn't care about gaming, I'd probably go with either Manjaro (Arch based, but uses its own repos to slow down the rolling release of Arch by about month or so), or Ubuntu, just to guarantee a higher degree of stability (Arch can sometimes break things, but it's not that often, in my experience).

              While I know the community and NVIDIA are working to get explicit sync pushed out which will help a lot of the NVIDIA woes running on Wayland, about six weeks ago I decided to not wait anymore on that and went and bought an AMD 7800XT video card to run instead of NVIDIA. Wayland, and gaming, honestly feel much smoother to me now (and I don't have to mess around with video drivers anymore). The only quirk about Wayland has to do with global mouse key shortcuts (namely, I use a mouse button for Push-To-Talk in Discord and had to set up a quirky solution).

              I'm eager for KDE Plasma 6.1 because it'll have built-in RDP server support which will allow me to remote in easier using an RDP client from my Mac work laptop (I don't really care for VNC [too slow], Rustbox [too buggy for me], or many of the other remote desktop solutions out there).

    • @hedge
      I love Affinity Photo, Designer, and Publisher... They are a powerful Adobe replacement.

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