- Adobe is preparing for the next generation of AI agents
- More autonomy will unlock more creative time
- 75% of Photoshop users now use AI
Adobe has spilled beans exactly where he sees the Agent playing a role in the workforce, and the spoiler alert, humans will not be displaced by technology despite our concerns.
Described as “Technology that is capable of conversing, acting and solving complex problems”, the AFFEE AGENS marks the next stage of the artificial intelligence wave, promising more autonomy to free workers’ time for more productive and creative tasks.
In a blog post, Adobe’s digital media business, Ely Greenfield, said some of the areas in which the set of adobe applications has already seen important improvements with AI and AI agents, but the message remains clear: humans are in the center of creativity.
Adobe wants AI agents to help … do not replace … human workers
“We have always believed that the most powerful creative force in the world is human imagination,” Greenfield said.
In Acrobat, for example, the AI assistant can understand and interact with documents to help workers process large amounts of data more efficiently, and personalized agents are already on their way to specific roles tasks such as investigations or sales assistants.
Perhaps one of the most impressive use cases for adobe’s AI is to improve the existing work of creatives: in Photoshop, users can use models for context conscious editions as a history of blur and eliminate people, while technological facilities also with rough cuts, color adjustment and audio mixture in Premiere Pro.
Dive of the generation of “more than 20 billion commercially safe assets and ready for production worldwide” from the launch of Firefly about two years, Adobe states that more than three out of four photoshop users now use generative.
Greenfield also referred to another blog post that highlighted Adobe’s creative approach for artificial intelligence, and stresses that the user data is “never” used to train Firefly.
Concluding, the CTO highlighted the company’s plans to “help each creator, at each level of skill, to work in each environment.”