Adobe wants to stop AI models from losing their trains of thought.
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Major tech firms seemingly see generative video as the next frontier of AI.
Adobe’s recent patent signals that it may be creating a marketing co-pilot.
Adobe got slapped Monday with a lawsuit from the Department of Justice over its allegedly deceitful practices in its subscription business.
Adobe said last week that it would overhaul its terms of service and clarified that it will not train AI using customer data.
Adobe wants to predict your video edits through your messages.
The platform says it plans to identify and label content created by other AI tools, like Adobe’s Firefly and OpenAI’s Dall-E.
“Real solutions to hallucination are going to be the next step change in AI.”
The filing adds to several of the company’s AI-powered business tool patents, and signals its growing interest in enterprise-focused AI tech.
Niche models could be more accurate, save energy and present less security risk than an all-knowing large language model.
The tech relies on oversampling of images with “minority attributes” to make sure the outputs actually reflect the inputs.
The company may be looking to boost its AI capabilities after the fallout of it’s proposed acquisition of competitor Figma.
For the first time in exactly 10 years, Wall Street dealmakers will fall short of facilitating at least $3 trillion worth of deals.
The company’s latest patent could have implications for training image generating AI without the copyright issues.
Adobe wants to fight disinformation one PDF at a time with it’s latest patent filing.
Adobe wants to watch its users a little closer so it can recommend how to properly change the brightness in Photoshop using AI.