Photoshop’s Firefly Generative AI Arrives With a Creative Cloud Price Hike – CNET

Firefly, Adobe’s family of generative AI tools, is out of beta testing and ready for commercial use. That means all you creative types now have the green light to use it to create imagery in Photoshop, to try out wacky text effects on the Firefly website, to recolor images in Illustrator and to spruce up posters and videos made with Adobe Express. I’ve been doing some of that myself.

And now we know how much Adobe’s artificial intelligence technology costs to use. Adobe includes credits to use Firefly in varying amounts depending on which Creative Cloud subscription plan you’re paying for, but it’s raising subscription prices in November.

If you have the full Creative Cloud subscription, which gets you access to all of Adobe’s software for $55 per month, you can produce up to 1,000 creations a month. If you have a single-app subscription, for example to use Photoshop or Premiere Pro at $21 per month, it’s 500 creations a month. Subscriptions to Adobe Express, an all-purpose mobile app costing $10 per month, come with 250 uses of Firefly.

“We don’t want anyone conserving [credits] or creating from a place of scarcity or feeling like they’re rationing,” said Deepa Subramaniam, vice president of marketing for Adobe’s Creative Cloud subscription.

But take note. Adobe will raise its subscription prices about 9% to 10% in November, citing the addition of Firefly and other AI features along with new tools new and apps. For example, the all-apps annual subscription increases from $55 to $60 per month, and a single-app subscription increases from $21 to $23 per month.

In my experience with Firefly so far, it’s generated some very cool effects — but I’ve also seen its limitations. It’s a cloud-based service, so there’s reason to expect Adobe will make good on promises of improvements as it retrains Firefly for better results.

UBS analyst Karl Keirstead estimated in a report Thursday that Adobe will generate $400 million to $500 million in new revenue from the price increase in the company’s next fiscal year. He had expected Adobe to charge for a standalone Firefly subscription, though, not to have it folded into the overall Creative Cloud prices. His firm “We … wonder if this says anything about Adobe’s confidence in a more direct Firefly monetization approach,” he said in the report.

Generative AI’s impressive abilities to mimic human output burst into the public consciousness in 2022 with the arrival of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, a text-based chatbot. Generative AI tools trained on large swaths of data make plenty of mistakes, but Adobe’s customers could prove more forgiving since many of them are exploring ideas. Generative AI is better with flights of fancy than literal truth.

Customers with paid subscription plans will be able to continue using Firefly if they blow through their monthly allowance, but it’ll be slower, Subramaniam said. Those who are on free tiers get a taste of the technology with 25 uses per month. Those who expect to blow through their caps can pay $5 per month for an extra 100 Firefly usage credits starting in November.

An AI-generated image of a fish floating in a misty forest scene with a hiker in a blue jacket in the foreground An AI-generated image of a fish floating in a misty forest scene with a hiker in a blue jacket in the foreground

I used Firefly in Photoshop first to expand the original image, left, with new trees and greenery, which it did capably. The fish I added next is less plausible, but Firefly blended it well with the background.

Stephen Shankland/CNET

You often can get better results by breaking generation down into multiple steps. For example, in the parachuting hippopotamus image above, I first prompted Photoshop to generate a hippo against a blue sky, then expanded the image to give it more sky, then added the parachute.

Images labeled as AI-generated

Plenty of people are alarmed by “deepfake” AI copies of real people and impressed with realistic AI images like the Pope blinged out in a puffy jacket. To help combat the problems, Adobe is using a technology called content credentials that it helped develop to improve transparency.

Images created using Adobe’s tools will be labeled as AI-generated using content credentials, Subramaniam said.

“That’s really how we’ll bring some trust and some transparency into the process to demystify all of this,” she said.

Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to help create some stories. For more, see this post.

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