Adobe Animate, the 2D animation software, is set to be discontinued on March 1st, according to Adobe. The company announced that it will no longer sell the software, but existing users will have one year to download their files, The Verge reported.
Adobe cited the emergence of newer platforms that better serve the needs of animators as the reason for the decision. A FAQ posted on Adobe's website confirmed the discontinuation. Emma Roth, a news writer for The Verge, reported the impending shutdown on February 2, 2026.
The move comes as other tech companies are making changes to their services. Crunchyroll, a streaming platform for anime, recently raised its monthly subscription prices by up to 25 percent, Ars Technica reported. This price hike occurred weeks after the service eliminated its free tier. Sony acquired Crunchyroll from AT&T in 2020, at which time the platform had 3 million paid subscribers and 197 million users with free accounts, according to Ars Technica.
Meanwhile, the internet has been observing the rise of AI-driven platforms. Fortune reported on Moltbook, a social media site where AI bots post content while humans observe. Security researchers have raised concerns about exposed databases, malware, and potential safety issues associated with such platforms. Experts suggest that Moltbook could become a "live demo" of how the new internet could fail, according to Fortune.
In other tech-related news, a civilian online marketplace is allowing users to buy custom instruction files for generating celebrity deepfakes, MIT Technology Review reported. Researchers at Stanford and Indiana University found that some of these files were specifically designed to create pornographic images, despite the site's ban on such content.
Amidst these developments, Emerge Career, a Y Combinator-funded startup, is seeking a Founding Product Designer, according to a Hacker News posting. The company focuses on workforce development training for justice-impacted individuals, aiming to break the cycle of poverty and incarceration. Gabriel Saruhashi, Founder of Emerge Career, stated that the company is "creating pathways to real second chances."
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