Adobe

Report March 2025

Submitted
Since June 2022, Adobe has been a Signatory of the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation, supporting the intention and ambition of this Code.  In September 2024, Adobe also announced our commitment to uphold the pledges of the EU AI Pact, reiterating our support for the transparency requirements under the EU AI Act.

Adobe is a global leader in digital marketing and digital media solutions. Since the company’s founding in December 1982, we have pushed the boundaries of creativity with products and services that allow our customers to create, deploy, and enhance digital experiences. Our purpose is to serve the creator and respect the consumer, and our heritage is built on providing trustworthy and innovative solutions to our customers and communities. Adobe has a long history of pioneering innovation. As we continue harnessing the power of AI, it is critical to pair innovation with responsible innovation in order to ensure this technology is developed and deployed in a way that benefits everyone. 

We stand at a pivotal moment as AI has begun to transform the way we live, work and play. As AI becomes more prevalent however, we are also witnessing extraordinary challenges to trust in digital content. In today’s digital world, misattributed and miscontextualised content spreads quickly. Whether inadvertent misinformation or deliberate deception, inauthentic content is on the rise and once we are fooled once, we will begin to doubt anything we see or hear online – even if it is true.

With the increasing volume and velocity of digital content creation, including synthetic media, it is critical to ensure transparency in what we are consuming online. Adobe is committed to leading in this space and finding technical solutions that address the issues of manipulated media and deceptive digital content. 

Content provenance and media literacy are a major focus for Adobe and the work of the Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI), which Adobe co-founded in 2019 and leads today. We are focused on cross-industry participation, with an open, extensible approach for providing transparency for digital content (i.e. images, audio, video, documents, and AI) to allow for better evaluation of that content.

The Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI) now has more than 4,000 members globally working to increase trust in digital content through provenance tools, which are the facts about the origins of a piece of digital content. The CAI works in tandem with the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA), an open technical standards organisation also co-founded by Adobe in 2021, to implement C2PA´s solution to digital content provenance – called Content Credentials. 

Content Credentials are essentially a “nutrition label” for digital content that anyone can implement to show how a piece of content is created and modified. Content Credentials are a combination of cryptographic metadata, fingerprinting and watermarking, designed to remain securely attached and travel with the digital content wherever it goes (for more information, please see “durable content credentials”). They include important information which may include the creator’s name, the date an image was created, what tools were used to create an image and any edits that were made along the way, including whether AI was used. This empowers users to create a digital chain of trust and authenticity. The CAI developed free, open-source tools based on the C2PA standard for anyone to implement Content Credentials into their own products, services, or platforms. 

In 2024, some major developments concerning the C2PA took place, with several companies joining the C2PA steering committee and demonstrating support for Content Credentials. TikTok also joined the C2PA as a member and began labelling AI-generated content uploaded to its platform with Content Credentials. 

The Adobe-led CAI has also invested in creating and promoting media literacy curricula to educate the public about the dangers of deepfakes, the need for scepticism, and tools available today to help them understand what is true. In partnership with the Adobe Education team, the CAI updated its media literacy curriculum in February 2024 to include Generative AI curricular materials.

Provenance solutions such as Content Credentials are more important than ever as generative AI makes it easier to create, scale, and alter digital content. As AI rapidly evolves, our work will continue to adapt to emerging trends and evolving industry needs. We see Adobe’s focus on supporting and promoting wide adoption of Content Credentials as being particularly relevant to the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation and are encouraged that Commitments relating to provenance and the C2PA open standard have been adopted as commitments in the Code in the Empowering Users chapter. We encourage all relevant Signatories to sign up to these commitments and join this cross-industry effort to tackle disinformation through technology.

Download PDF

Commitment 20
Relevant Signatories commit to empower users with tools to assess the provenance and edit history or authenticity or accuracy of digital content.
We signed up to the following measures of this commitment
Measure 20.1 Measure 20.2
In line with this commitment, did you deploy new implementation measures (e.g. changes to your terms of service, new tools, new policies, etc)?
Yes
If yes, list these implementation measures here
Adobe supported the development and launch of Content Credentials, which act like a nutrition label for digital content and is fast becoming an industry standard for digital content provenance. The user-directed Content Credentials allow creators to provide attribution for their work. In the context of generative AI, Content Credentials can indicate whether a digital file was human-created, AI-edited, or AI-generated, allowing viewers to decide for themselves whether to trust it. Adobe automatically attaches Content Credentials to wholly generated Adobe Firefly outputs to indicate that generative AI was used to create it. This information enhances transparency for their audience.

Do you plan to put further implementation measures in place in the next 6 months to substantially improve the maturity of the implementation of this commitment?
If yes, which further implementation measures do you plan to put in place in the next 6 months?
Measure 20.1
Relevant Signatories will develop technology solutions to help users check authenticity or identify the provenance or source of digital content, such as new tools or protocols or new open technical standards for content provenance (for instance, C2PA).
C2PA standard and Content Credentials

QRE 20.1.1
Relevant Signatories will provide details of the progress made developing provenance tools or standards, milestones reached in the implementation and any barriers to progress.
Adobe is a co-founder and steering committee member of the standards organisation, the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA), a Joint Development Foundation project within the Linux Foundation. Adobe co-chairs the steering committee which meets regularly, chairs the Technical Working Group and has representatives on the User Experience Task Force, Threats and Harms Task Force. The C2PA also receives support from Adobe employees in Communications and Policy for C2PA external engagement. 

We are committed to working with other C2PA members such as Microsoft, BBC, Intel, Google, Sony, Amazon, OpenAI and TruePic to ensure open technical standards for provenance are maintained to the highest standards; used to develop and implement content provenance across the ecosystem which is interoperable; and ultimately adopted by international standards organisations as the leading industry standard for digital content provenance. 

 Internally, at Adobe we also have a team of full-time employees dedicated to working on provenance. This includes engineers helping to develop and maintain our open-source tooling for the community, user experience designers, and a team dedicated to advocacy and education, supporting adoption, and growing the community globally.

In popular Adobe creative tools including Photoshop and Lightroom, consumers have access to attach Content Credentials to their digital content. Content Credentials are a free, open-source technology leveraging the C2PA open technical standard and serves as a “nutrition label” for digital content. Content Credentials can include important information such as the creator’s name, the date the content was created, what tools were used to create an image and any edits that were made along the way.

Other applications in Adobe Creative Cloud including Illustrator, Adobe Express, Adobe Stock, and Behance also support Content Credentials, and Adobe is continuing to roll out support for Content Credentials across products. 

Additionally, Adobe automatically attaches Content Credentials to content wholly generated with Adobe Firefly, the company’s family of creative generative AI models, to ensure transparency around AI-generated content. This level of transparency allows customers to see content with context and helps build a more trustworthy digital ecosystem.