• 0x0@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      The “losing money” argument is the same they use against media piracy.
      Oil piracy though, no biggie so long as it’s a big government doing it.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    What many people don’t think about is that open source / free software is anti-billionaire software.

    Since all software is bits, and it’s free and easy to copy bits, to make money from software, a company needs to build a “moat”. A moat is something that protects your company from people choosing alternatives. Open source software is built without a moat, so that anybody and everybody can access it. And, if you build with the GPL anybody who builds something based on your software is forbidden from building a moat of their own.

    This means that it’s really hard to get rich building free / open source software. But, it also means that in any area where there is free / open source software it’s much harder for fully commercial, closed source, for profit companies to make big profits. Enshittify too much and people will just switch to the alternative, even if the alternative is significantly less stable, not as easy to use, is lacking features, etc. Piss people off too much and they might actually invest engineering money on improving the open source alternative.

    Adobe is a big company with their fingers in many different pies. Photoshop is only one of their products. Gimp alone can’t do much to hold Adobe back, but it does limit what they can do with Photoshop and still expect to make money from it.

    • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      This means that it’s really hard to get rich building free / open source software.

      Red Hat, Canonical and others disagree.

    • Gates9@sh.itjust.works
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      20 hours ago

      Software licensing will eventually be relegated to the “dustbin of history”, hopefully it won’t be after humanity emerges from a post-apocalyptic hellscape.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        20 hours ago

        Yeah. Software licensing is artificial scarcity, trying to make the new world of bits seem like the old world of objects so that people who knew how to make money with objects can still make money with bits.

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          18 hours ago

          I agree that it’s artificial scarcity, but I don’t think the conversation is going to fully be able to move to removing that scarcity until we find a way to handle the people who rearrange the bits actually living in a world of objects and totally authentic scarcity.

          It’s the same dilemma we have with authors and musicians. Even if it can be infinitely copied the people who make it still need to eat, and not just be able to find a way to eat, but to reliably and predictably eat which makes donations and crowd funding iffy at best.

          As a user and contributer to open source, I’m loath to put up any defense of something that irritates me more often than not. As a person who makes a living working on the closed side I can honestly say I would probably not be in the field if there wasn’t as much ability to make a living in it.

          Software patents can fuck off though.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            16 hours ago

            It will probably take something like universal basic income. Also, before copyright etc. a lot of art was created when a patron paid the artist for their work. In modern times, a single individual patron has been replaced by a bunch of them using Patreon. In addition, some people (not enough) are employed to work on open source software. It’s similar to a patron kind of arrangement because someone is paying for the “artist” to work, even though the thing the artist produces can’t be owned by the employer.

            I think if you combine all those various things the need for “intellectual property” goes away. But, the people who currently make money from IP are going to fight tooth and nail to keep it.

      • KneeTitts
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        19 hours ago

        apocalyptic hellscape

        Which is, sadly, where we are right now

        • bitchkat
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          17 hours ago

          Heading there but plenty of room to get worse

  • Inucune
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    1 day ago

    Adobe didn’t lose money. You can’t lose money you never had.

  • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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    1 day ago

    Because of Adobe’s hatred and abuse of their users, Adobe lost millions of dollars.

    • hector@lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      Corporate has a strategy to win those customers back, in all such industries, buy out your competition and enter into a shittrust with remaining competitors, agreeing to both maximize revenue rather than compete for favour.

      Anti trust has been dead, courts have been captured, customers have no choice, stonk goes back ups.

  • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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    22 hours ago

    Jehan Pages, you have bestowed my life with an abundance of badly edited memes and given me a trade that can I be proud of (making badly edited memes in Gimp), thank you.

  • Zannsolo
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    15 hours ago

    I’ll be honest I’ve tried gimp and found that I’m terrible and not interested in making or editing any form of digital media. I’ve also tried Photoshop. Paint is more my speed fast and ugly.

    • enthusiasm_headquarters
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      22 hours ago

      Maybe you mean a more “brush and canvas” interface without complexity and distraction. I’m an artist that uses gimp. They are both great, Krita is just made with ease of use and emulation of irl tools in mind. GIMP can do emulation stuff too, but it can also do tons of other things, even video fx and animation.

  • neuromorph
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    21 hours ago

    all adobe needed to do was make one time purchase software and not subscription. The CC model is insane

  • Suavevillain
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    23 hours ago

    I’m so thankful to people like Pages who work hard on free alternatives.

    • KneeTitts
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      19 hours ago

      photogimp allowed me to abandon photoshop entirely, I vastly prefer my new adobe free workflow

  • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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    1 day ago

    A few of the replies here, those making those replies, could do with having someone introduce them to the concept of “put up or hack up”, and getting into a Free Software philosophy mindset, and out of a consumer mindset.

    GIMP’s free software. Free to use, study, share and change… You the user are empowered. Even if you yourself lack aptitude (beyond just having never tried), you can still seek the services of others, be it those you pay to implement what you want, or, form a community of like minded individuals with similar needs to be met, and from there, start to make it as you want. These days, even LLMs can help curate the software into forms more suited to your needs. … That is, where that’s not already happened, or where there are reconfigurations you were simply not aware of, because it had not occurred to you to search for such, having been conditioned to stay in the box by the consumer mindset the corporation curated in your mind. It’s refreshing to get out of having your mind curated by the corporation, and into using your mind to curate your software.

    Either the user controls the software, or the user is controlled by the software and those who control the software.

    It’s a different philosophy. Not just a different platform for you as a “consumer”. You’re not a cash-cow for the corporation, with Free Software. You can contribute. Scratch those itches yourself. You may find others share the same itch. Giving back, is a much more rewarding experience than just hoping daddy corporation will give you what you want while you continue to atrophy your abilities.

    Put up or hack up. ;)

    • enthusiasm_headquarters
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      22 hours ago

      some open source projects have very unpleasant communities around them, GIMP is not one of them. very easy to get into and everyone is extremely helpful and friendly.

    • Sp00kyB00k
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      1 day ago

      And giving back comes in all forms. Writing docs, answering questions, helping out new users, fixing bugs, or just spreading the gospel of said FOSS software.

      … Y’all should check out Krita.

      • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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        1 day ago

        … Y’all should check out Krita.

        MyPaint too.

        And others.

        Imagemagick’s not to be scoffed at either.

  • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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    23 hours ago

    Someone asked me yesterday what products besides Adobe’s there were for his elderly cousin to merge PDFs, or extract pages. I proposed a few options, so I’m technically helping to lose money for Adobe. I’m doing my part 😁

    • enthusiasm_headquarters
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      22 hours ago

      Linux comes (at least on Mint and Ubuntu) with the poppler-utils suite of tools. you can merge, extract pages, even rip all the images out of a pdf in source quality. very useful.

      • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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        18 hours ago

        Yeah you get a lot of options on Linux. I used pdftk last time.

        Unfortunately the parameters here were, “elderly dude” “needs GUI” and “on Windows” :-(

  • baatliwala
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    1 day ago

    Man ain’t nobody lost money because of Gimp. Flawed argument aside, at least Blender could be in for a shout

    • untorquer
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      I used to steal profit from Safeway all the time! I should have put those tips intended for me as an individual donations to the corporation in the till as was policy. So naive and selfish.

    • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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      Yeah, this is kinda BS.

      Adobe don’t care. Nearly every design firm is going to ask you about your Adobe experience, so you can use their Adobe software.

      Maybe some of their designers will use GIMP. But that’s like saying your office also uses libre office and Linux. Which is extremely rare.

      • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 day ago

        Design lead here. I know photoshop like the back of my hand, but I also know Pixelmator (Mac only), Sketch and Affinity. All are very nice interfaces, one-time, or major version licenses, and smaller, responsive dev teams.

        There are compromises in all software, but my team uses Pixelmator and Affinity because we’re a small company and it won’t hurt their design skills to know more tools besides the Adobe suite.

        Gimp for a long time had shitty shortcuts and was quite unfriendly to Mac users (the REAL vendor lock-in in the design world btw). Him is just too slow to load, and ugly to look at, similar but less so with Inkscape.

        Big firms might be harder to change, but it’s possibly and there are really good alternatives that Adobe probably worries a little about. Unfortunately they aren’t FOSS for the most part.

        • enthusiasm_headquarters
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          22 hours ago

          true that it wasn’t good for mac. I gave up apple/mac and their increasingly shitty overpriced products 10 years ago. Since then Linux has come a long way and so has GIMP. Good enough to kill Photoshop? Not any time soon, but good enough for professional use certainly and good enough for new artists to start on. Install G’MIC and it’s so much better.

        • moopet@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          GIMP had some shitty shortcuts, sure. But so did PS.

          As an example of better shortcuts - you could get a rectangular selection by pressing “r”, which is an example of a very simple and straightforward UI language. You could then adjust that selection with handles without needing any chords or modifiers, zoom in with the number keys or scroll wheel, etc.

          You could open a tool, like the colour picker, and switch to a different window without the app going beep and telling you “no”, which is what PS traditionally did.

          You could open the app and load an image in 1/10th the time it took for PS to start which made it way nicer to use. When I was using PS I generally left it open all the time because of its sluggish start, which meant it was sitting hogging resources all day.

          What I’m saying is that your personal workflow and the general UX of whatever software you’re used to using is always the thing you’re going to use as a point of comparison, and if your expected shortcut is different it doesn’t mean it’s worse.

    • Deconceptualist@leminal.space
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      2 days ago

      Right? I hate the phrasing in this headline. Adobe isn’t somehow “owed” those millions so it’s totally backwards to call that a loss. Fuck that noise.

      They’re a business, they should earn their revenue by fostering a healthy competitive environment and then winning through innovation and customer loyalty. Not the monopoly licensing and subscription lock-in BS they’ve been doing for decades.

    • altphoto@lemmy.today
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      2 days ago

      My kids keep screwing Nintendo. The other day I saw my kid grab a Lego, he slid it on the table and then made it jump over an orange.

      I’m waiting for the letter from their lawyers.

    • DylanMc6 [any, any]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      All monopolies (including Adobe) should be seized by the workers, and then split into different companies and collectivized by the workers. Seriously!

      • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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        17 hours ago

        For PDF editing, there’s so many good open source products.

        Absolutely no reason to be using Adobe just for PDFs. Waste of money.

        • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Yes. Bluebeam Revu can do everything Adobe Acrobat can do (better imo).

          Acrobat is still a product of Adobe, which is why I brought Bluebeam up.

          I know this thread is about GIMP vs Adobe Photoshop, but OP of this comment thread said that Adobe has a monopoly over every business use. Not the case in the construction world

          • vin@lemmynsfw.com
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            15 hours ago

            Ah right, got you.

            Bluebeam is so powerful that I feel the way it’s used in some construction companies is like how corporate uses excel. In that it has gone beyond what it was initially intended for and has become the primitive around which they work.