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How to turn it off – Daily Report

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Adobe

If you use Adobe products with cloud storage or backup, such as Photoshop or Lightroom, the company may be using your data to train machine learning algorithms. Here’s how to opt out.

Adobe explains on its website that the company “may analyze your Creative Cloud or Document Cloud content to provide product features and improve and develop our products and services.” Scanned data can include images, audio files, video, text, or other documents stored in Creative Cloud or synced across devices.

Adobe says that the analysis only runs “on content rendered or stored on Adobe’s servers,” so in theory editing local Photoshop files or using Lightroom Classic with a local library shouldn’t cause it. your images are scanned. Machine learning is used to train object recognition in Lightroom, Liquid Mode in Acrobat, and other similar features, which is fine, if Adobe had done it. asked first. Adobe is vague about how it might use the data collected through AI in the future, but the company is already experimenting with generative AI.

How to disable content analysis

Fortunately, turning off Adobe’s AI-powered content analysis is a quick process. Go to account.adobe.com/privacy in your web browser; if you are not signed in yet, the Adobe site will ask you to do so first. Then scroll down to “Content Analysis” and set the switch to “Off”.

"Adobe may analyze your content using techniques such as machine learning (for example, for pattern recognition) to develop and improve our products and services.  If you prefer that Adobe not analyze your files to develop and improve our products and services, you can opt out.  content analysis at any time.  This setting does not apply in certain limited circumstances".

Adobe notes that you can still “manually review your content” in specific situations, such as content that goes public (such as uploading to Adobe Stock or featured section in Adobe Express), participating in a beta, or an early access issue. . However, images that you save for your private use must be secure.

Via: Baldur Bjarnason (Mastodon)

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