this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2024
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No, they don't. If you're storing something that is found by a law enforcement agency, you are legally liable. That's the difference.
You can't just say out loud "Hey users, please stop storing CSAM on our servers." Not how that works.
Adobe is not a video distribution platform. They do not have this level of culpability.
Adobe CLOUD requires storage of images and video on their servers to edit them. That's what this is about.
That's not the same as content distribution.
Sharing content to clients cannot be effectively done through creative cloud.
It does not make sense to try and stop the distribution at the level of video editing. Not only is the thought of child predators making regular use of professional editing software completely absurd, but even if you assume they do, why the fuck do you think they would use the inbuilt cloud sharing tools to do so?? They would just encrypt the contents and transmit it over any other file sharing service...
It makes no sense to implement this measure because it does absolutely nothing to impede criminals, but enables a company well known for egregious privacy violations unprecedented access to information completely law abiding clients have legitimate reasons to want to keep private.
It is a farce. A smokescreen intended to encroach on customers precious data all the while doing nothing to assist law enforcement.