There is an image diffusion model named ‘Mitsua’ (easy to load up in Stable Diffusion) which is trained only on public domain and donated training data, which I use for a similar purpose at work.
I appreciate the ability to create quick “vibe sketches’ of ideas I want to express in a post, in cases where I don’t want a more precise method like a Mermaid chart or Table or a true drawing/diagram.
I’m on the lookout for more models like this, because I don’t like supporting any company that has historically been coy about its training data, which includes OpenAI and Anthropic.
Adobe seems to have gone through a little effort to do ethical sourcing of training data, so it’s better than OpenAI and Anthropic in that regard even when it also isn’t perfect.
For sure! Much like the AI safety scorecard, no one is out of the red, but it seems like some of the older publishing house type companies are trying to respect existing content licensing institutions. However, I’ve seen many creators and artists complain that it doesn’t matter; it’s already too overshadowed by the actions of OpenAI et al.
Here’s a recent one where the quality is pretty good: f-lite. They say, “The models were trained on Freepik’s internal dataset comprising approximately 80 million copyright-safe images.”
There is an image diffusion model named ‘Mitsua’ (easy to load up in Stable Diffusion) which is trained only on public domain and donated training data, which I use for a similar purpose at work.
I appreciate the ability to create quick “vibe sketches’ of ideas I want to express in a post, in cases where I don’t want a more precise method like a Mermaid chart or Table or a true drawing/diagram.
I’m on the lookout for more models like this, because I don’t like supporting any company that has historically been coy about its training data, which includes OpenAI and Anthropic.
Adobe seems to have gone through a little effort to do ethical sourcing of training data, so it’s better than OpenAI and Anthropic in that regard even when it also isn’t perfect.
For sure! Much like the AI safety scorecard, no one is out of the red, but it seems like some of the older publishing house type companies are trying to respect existing content licensing institutions. However, I’ve seen many creators and artists complain that it doesn’t matter; it’s already too overshadowed by the actions of OpenAI et al.
Here’s a recent one where the quality is pretty good: f-lite. They say, “The models were trained on Freepik’s internal dataset comprising approximately 80 million copyright-safe images.”