- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@lemmy.bestiver.se
- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@lemmy.bestiver.se
Yes, Affinity really is free. You can use every tool in the Pixel, Vector, and Layout studios, plus all of the customization and export features, as much as you want, with no restrictions or payment needed. If you’re on a Canva premium plan, you’ll also be able to unlock Canva’s powerful AI tools within Affinity.
- never support anything by canva - Why not? - they’re a horrible ai slop company - Ah I see thanks for the heads up 
 
 
 
- If you’re on a Canva premium plan, you’ll also be able to unlock Canva’s powerful AI tools within Affinity. - So freemium, not free. Which is also fine, just saying. - Edit: Needs new Canva account. My Serif account didn’t migrate. Be sure to turn off BS under https://www.canva.com/account/privacy-preferences 
- At first glance, this all sounds positive, especially for users without an affinity for AI. - However, time will tell whether the program will become less appealing if it turns out that the majority of Affinity users are not persuaded to sign up for a Canvas subscription for AI editing. - Either certain tools and functions will disappear behind a paywall, or compatibility will be restricted by no longer allowing free import and export to certain file formats. 
- It’s weird that I can’t just login using my existing Affinity ID, also Canva’s privacy policy states clear as day under section 2 that they’ll use your data to train AI models, and that policy applies to Affinity. - Edit: Data collection within Affinity seems to be opt-in for now. - I see someone on masto saying its sending something out to them over internet even when opted out - Just usage pings or actual data? - No full pcap or anakysis so no idea 
 
 
- Some switches were set to on for me under https://www.canva.com/account/privacy-preferences 
 
 - …I want free hugs! 
 
- I use this at a center I volunteer at that works with the mentally disabled. Unsurprisingly, a lot of those people are old. Surprisingly, Canva is simple enough that I’ve been able to train the elderly, of all people, to use the program to make fliers or three-fold pamphlets for themselves. It’s a good program for what it does, and the center pays for a premium subscription, so it’s not something I personally need to worry much about. - Honestly, I’m fine with this in terms of the program’s functionality, as long as Canva does’t fuck with its user interface. It is pretty simple and intuitive, and I’d argue that the UI is quite possibly one of its strongest assets, seconded only by the massive amount of options/elements you can add to your project. And it’s already apparent what AI is mostly used for within the program: making more graphic elements to slap onto your page, and more ready-made templates you can still go in and alter everything in at-will. And honestly, I’m fine with that. - If they are a registered non profit they shouldn’t have to pay for premium, and be eligible for a free subscription 
 
- If you have to sign up to use it, it isn’t free. - AI training? - Probably, and also the first step towards adopting Adobe’s shitty business model. - About a year ago, Canva tried to raise their prices significantly. - I forget exactly, but I pay for an account and can have 5 people on my team. They said they would start charging for each team member or something like that. - One person said their cot went up from like $100 to $600, maybe the numbers are off, but it’s close to how severe there increase was. - There was so much backlash over it that they decided to keep the old pricing structure. - So they’re planning to hook people in with freebies then boil the frogs a little slower. 
 
 
 
 
- Oh god, how are they financing its development? Selling my personal data? Training AI on my data? Nagware? Not giving us a Linux version, ever? - Oh god, how are they financing its development? - Canva’s AI features are a subscription service. Existing Affinty features are now free. - What if not enough people pay for the AI features? Will Affinity enshittify? - Also, are these features going to be littered across the UI as greyed out buttons that show a popover prompting you to get a Canvas subscription when you hover them? That’s basically ads baked into the UI. - What if not enough people pay for the AI features? Will Affinity enshittify? - There’s always the option to go back to being a regular paid product. - Also, are these features going to be littered across the UI as greyed out buttons that show a popover prompting you to get a Canvas subscription when you hover them? - Not sure why you use future tense because the new version is out now and you can just take a look at it yourself. - It’s now an all in one UI and no longer different applications for vector graphics, photo editing, and layout. You can switch between different UIs on the fly and Canva AI is just one of those and one you can even disable:  - I don’t own a Windows or Mac machine, I have no idea what the current product looks like, but I’ve been following Affinity for a while in the hopes that I can eventually buy their product with money. 
 
 
 
- Linux became so good at emulating windows apps, it now runs some of them better than windows itself (higher fps, lower power draw), so eventually their will be a port. - Given that these non native ports run in containers/bottles/whatever and internet access is often limited by default. However internet access is the key for their new business modell. - Basically Linux users will get the same or better product, without the drawbacks, which reminds me of pirated movies, where only the people actually buying it were made to sit through unskipable commercials. - Sadly Affinity Studio isn’t one of them - it runs barely, if at all in emulators and believe me we tried. Especially for larger files it’s still unusable. 
 
- Considering you can turn off telemetry and never need to connect it to the internet after activation, I’m assuming that - like how Adobe uses cheap education licenses to on-ramp people onto their platform - this is largely intended to drive professionals towards Canva and their various other products. They take a loss on this product to become the de-facto standard image/vector/publishing application. 
- The best possible scenario is that they’re just using it to entice people to pay for a premium subscription and will leave it that way. But the chances are that once they’ve pulled enough people in with the offer of free software, they’ll alter the deal. 
 
- I’ve been a paying affinity customer for years, and I’m not signing up for Canva. - I get it’s “free”, but I’m sketched out. - I’m not buying that it’s free unless it’s FOSS almost ever. Maybe it’s just a “create an account so we can collect data on you” deal, but that still isn’t free. - Yes, you have to create an account in Canva and turn off a bunch of tracking that is set on by default. There’s even a record setting that is off at the time of me discovering it, but that just made me nervous. - I recently downloaded it to try it out but i’m thinking of just torrenting adobe tbh. 
 
 
- Top ten answers on the board; we asked 100 users “How will Canva cover the costs of the software development if Affinity is free?” - It has Ai features by subscription to Canva Premium. - don’t believe companies when they tell you they don’t want all the money on the planet by any means possible 
 
 
- “Free” 
- I almost bought publisher last week, and postponed till Black Friday. Just wow!!! - You might have tried, but the company took all its products off the market for the last several weeks in anticipation of this announcement. You could use the trial, but you couldn’t purchase a new license. - I didn’t try to do the purchase, but very nice to know the company blocked the purchase! I was also very happy with the product too. What a difference from the likes of Adobe. 
 
 
- I was really hoping for Linux support some day. Now, I am totally fine sticking with GIMP. - Krita is also another good alternative, imo. - Isn’t Krita more focused on digital painting than photo editing? I always end up going back to the GIMP because of that even though I use KDE. - Yep. It’s 100% digital painting. All photo manipulation features are either minimal implementation or simply does not exist. - All the developement roadmap are often times trying to replicate Clip Studio Paint as it becomes the most used digital painting software for newer generation. Like comic/manga layout, integrated 3D pose, etc. - That’s what I thought. People keep saying Krita is a great alternative to GIMP, Photoshop, and Affinity Photo, but photo editing is not its focus at all. - It’s not but it has had non-destructive adjustment layers for years before Gimp. It’s fine for a lot of things with a much better interface. 
 
 
 
 
- I thought Affinity apps is one of those that works great with Proton/Wine. - It didn’t work me at all. 
 
 
- Enshitification is inevitable. Ugh. - At least give us a Linux version. 
- Enshittification countdown begins now - It started when they bought affinity. 
 
















