Among the most significant changes with this year’s Elements releases has little to do with new features but instead concerns the ways users purchase and own the software. While prior versions of Photoshop and Premiere Elements have been lifetime licenses — the user buys the software and then owns it indefinitely — this year’s release has moved to a three-year license term.

      • HeyListenWatchOut@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        No worries. It’s not for everyone.

        I’m hoping the dumb songs that I have that company fart out for free as jokes supporting Lemmy comments, or as backing tracks for clips of my friends and I playing Fortnite that I share just amongst our group of 10 people won’t somehow upend and displace the countless artists whose works I’ve supported over the decades via concert ticket purchases, royalties via movie soundtrack licensing, and buying official merchandise.

    • glitchdx@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      luddites weren’t anti technology, they were pro workers rights. they would find gpt style ai offensive.

      • HeyListenWatchOut@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I would argue that in their pursuit of worker rights they sought to prevent progress rather than supporting using the means of progress to lighten their own workload and then fight to receive the benefit that such machinery could provide.

        I’m for worker rights as well, but I don’t think that means we should go back to the dark ages for production.

        I just think that the bosses shouldn’t get all the money from the robot savings, while everyone else works their asses off for no additional benefit.

        Sort of like how I can use a dumb “AI” music tool thing to share jokes with friends and dumb meme posts, but at the same time also think that Columbia records or whatever music corp or Ticketmaster should NOT be able to gouge the prices for concerts and then on top of that, not pass the increased profit to the actual artists.