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Adobe unveils new platform for its Firefly generative AI model

Adobe has opened up a new platform for its Firefly generative AI model thatโ€™s designed to help organizations address the growing demand for content creation across their workplace. Announced during todayโ€™s Adobe Summit event, Adobe Firefly for Enterprise allows every employee within a company โ€” regardless of their creative skills โ€” to instantly generate images or copy from text-based descriptions, which can then be used in marketing campaigns, social media promotions, corporate presentations, and more.

A collection of image created or edited using Adobe Firefly.

Enterprise users will be able to accessย Fireflyย through the standalone Firefly application, Creative Cloud, or Adobe Express โ€” Adobeโ€™s cloud-based design platform. Businesses can also build Firefly into their own ecosystem by training the AI model with their own branded company assets, which will allow Firefly to replicate the brandโ€™s style when generating images and copy.

โ€œEnterprise leaders expect content demands will increase by five-fold over the next two years, making it imperative for them to drive efficiencies internally,โ€ said David Wadhwani, president of digital media business at Adobe. โ€œThis new enterprise offering empowers users of any skill level to instantly turn ideas into content with Firefly, while tapping into the power of Express and Creative Cloud to quickly modify assets and deliver standout designs.โ€

Adobe doesnโ€™t have exact pricing to share for Firefly for Enterprise yet, but Ashley Still, senior vice president of digital media at Adobe, confirmed to The Verge that licenses that can be deployed broadly to employees will be available to brands for a flat price, which will be based on the needs and size of the organization. There is also no confirmed release date for Firefly for Enterprise โ€” only that it will launch sometime after Firefly comes out of beta.

This new enterprise-level product isnโ€™t an unexpected move from Adobe, especially if youโ€™re already familiar with its Firefly AI model. Adobe created Firefly to be safe for commercial use by training it on Adobe Stock images, openly licensed content, and content without copyright restrictions within the public domain. That sets it apart from many other generative AI models, such asย OpenAIโ€™s Dall-E, which could causeย copyright issuesย for organizations as they havenโ€™t disclosed their training data.

Aside from its assured commercial viability, Fireflyโ€™s explosive popularity โ€” largely fueled by itsย high-quality resultsย โ€” will likely hold plenty of appeal for businesses looking to explore generative AI solutions. Firefly beta users have generated over 200 million images since it launched in March 2023, and over 150 million images have been generated in just two weeks using Photoshopโ€™s newย Firefly-powered Generative Fillย feature. The company also recently launched anย Enterprise tier for its Adobe Expressย product thatโ€™s designed to support collaboration across organizations.


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