By    Jess Weatherbed , a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet culture. Jess started her career at TechRadar, covering

Adobe’s experimental tool can identify an artist’s work online or on a tote bag

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2024-10-16 12:30:04

By Jess Weatherbed , a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet culture. Jess started her career at TechRadar, covering news and hardware reviews.

One of Adobe’s most notable experiments this year could help combat misinformation and ensure artists are credited for their work, no matter where it appears online or offline. Announced during the Sneaks segment at Adobe Max, Project “Know How’ is an in-development tool that can link ownership of an image or video across any online platform, and a multitude of real-world surfaces like posters, tumblers, and textiles.

Project Know How builds on Adobe’s Content Credentials tech, which applies a digital tag to track where a piece of content has been posted, who owns it, and if/how it’s been manipulated. Providing an image or video has Content Credentials applied, the tool can help creators establish ownership over their content even if that authentication metadata has been stripped out. The demo I saw, while early in development, managed to display the Content Credentials data on an image just by recording it on a camera, even on a texture-heavy object like a tote bag.

This could solve a multitude of gripes that artists face around how to protect their work. It’s a common issue for art and designs to be posted to online platforms like Pinterest and X without crediting the original creator, and therefore limiting the benefits of such exposure. While the creative community can address this manually by leaving comments or community notes that credit the original artist, Know How provides another level of protection that’s difficult for bad actors to bypass.

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