
Adobe Cancelation Fee Sees Twitter Users Backing Pirated Software
The creative software firm is facing sharp criticism after a post about its steep cancelation fees went viral.

Adobe's mistake seems to be to allow monthly payments for an annual subscription. They should charge the amount upfront. These users are trying to act smart by opting for the lower monthly payments in an annual subscription compared to a monthly subscription and then trying to wriggle out of it.I am not in favour of subscription based services for softwares but I don't understand the outrage here. The user opted for an annual subscription plan (paid monthly) which has lesser price than a monthly subscription so it is obvious that a user cannot cancel it after a few months while enjoying a discounted price. He should have gone for a monthly plan if he wanted to use it for a few months only. Moreover it is clearly written in the subscription and cancellation terms on the payment page that a cancellation fee will be charged if you cancel after 14 days. Adobe cc also waived off his cancellation charges. What else this guy wants?
True, very true. Apple has the most inexpensive and possibly the best video and audio production software in the industry.For a long time now, Adobe has strong-holded the creative space for professionals. Adobe is a pure shady company.
That's why smart professionals move to Mac OS for better creative software which you only pay for once and you own it for your lifetime. And that's how creative softwares should be (even Adobe used to follow a similar model in the past).
It's time people boycott using subscription services for creative software.
You can check out Pixelmator Pro on the Mac. It's a great alternative to Photoshop and has a brilliant interface (almost better than Photoshop).It's very easy to say that there are alternatives ( Affinity / Resolve etc. as mentioned) but extremely difficult to master them very rapidly ( specially DaVinci Resolve)
A professional photographer/ videographer is almost always under tremendous time constraints.
It's not the PS that's problematic to replace, but rather the LR. I know of 2 professional photographers ( one strictly wildlife, another in wedding and portrait photography) who moved to Capture One, the migration experience was difficult to say the least.
LR's library management is very different from Capture One ( where you can have both catalogue/ library and sessions)
Though Capture One supports PSD files, and exporting LR library seems very easy on papers, it can get really messy and there's a high chance of DB getting corrupted ( not a big deal for photography enthusiast, as you're not loosing any of your files, but for a professional who has TBs of photographs for clients, it's devastating)
And honestly for professional photographers there are not many options beside Adobe/ Phase One.
True, very true. Apple has the most inexpensive and possibly the best video and audio production software in the industry.
But what about photography? Why did they Kill Aperture is beyond me. The Photos software is getting better but it's not comparable with LR, and Apple has no alternative to PS.
Where should I make a post if I feel someone is trying to scam people here? I have messaged to the mods already though. Is that enough?You can check out Pixelmator Pro on the Mac. It's a great alternative to Photoshop and has a brilliant interface (almost better than Photoshop).
You can make a post under the Social Lounge segment under General Talk, if you want to spread your word.Where should I make a post if I feel someone is trying to scam people here? I have messaged to the mods already though. Is that enough?
I'd actually recommend diving straight to Resolve. Just watch a few youtube tutorials which should get you the basics of Resolve in 30mins or so, and there are tutorials for basically everything in resolve, including by Nvidia themselves for some special AI powered denoising feature I think. Provided you have the patience, you will learn Resolve without much problem. Do dedicate some time on it, and remember that patience is key with editingThen what would be an affordable or free option?
I definitely don't want to use the ahem versions (not worth it) and don't want to subscribe either.
Actually there are many subscription services which does that. It makes payment easier for subscribers. I think the real outrage isAdobe's mistake seems to be to allow monthly payments for an annual subscription. They should charge the amount upfront.
I disagree. Premiere pro and Resolve both are very intuitive to use. Only one big beginner friendly feature missing from Premiere pro is Kens burns effect. Unlike image editing, basic Video editing IMO is such an easy task that if a software is advanced then everything falls into place. It is so called easy software such as Windows movie maker and filmora which are sometimes big hassle because of lack of basic features or sometimes too many clicks needed to perform basic tasks.If you are just beginning don't go to Resolve straight away. It's a completely professional grade software with a pretty steep learning curve. Unless you are doing colour gading, don't use it right now.
Affordable option is Filmora. You can buy individual license for $70 but if you install a trial version and then uninstall it then filmora will give you a discount of about $15. Free option is Da Vinci Resolve.Then what would be an affordable or free option?
I definitely don't want to use the ahem versions (not worth it) and don't want to subscribe either.
on paper it looks good. but not really. once you start adding something like 50 layers.Isn't gimp a good alternative to photoshop?