Any pictures uploaded to Google Photos are private and can be accessed by others only if they are SHARED. You can share your photos individually or by group or by Album. If you share your photos by a link, be mindful that anyone who has the link (friend of a friend) can also see the photos.
If you delete synced photos from the Google Photos app, it will be deleted from everywhere – your device, the Google Photos app, the Google Photos website, and your file manager app. This will happen even if your Backup & Sync feature is on and whether you're using an Android or iPhone.
Google Photos may not be completely integrated with the Android ecosystem the way iOS is, but it's a native app that's well worth using, even if you don't use an Android device. You can also access it across desktop and laptop computers. Google Photos makes this much easier than iCloud.
While you can use both Google Photos and your built-in Gallery app at the same time, you'll have to choose one as the default. Luckily, Android makes it easy to set and change default apps by going into your settings. On the Samsung Galaxy, images and videos are opened by default with the Samsung Gallery app.
Picasa is a computer-based program, Google Photos is cloud-based. Picasa is old, Google Photos is new. If you take your pictures with a smartphone, the Google Photos app is fully automatic for uploading your photos to your Google account online and making them available to all your devices, including your computers.
Yes. Make sure they are completely uploaded, and then you can either delete manually from Apple Photos OR you can go into the Google Photos app (I recommend this way, it's easier, safer, and better) and click “free up space”.
Back up and sync is a storage service that automatically saves your photos and videos to your Google Account. These photos and videos will be accessible from any device where you are logged into your account.
Early in 2019, Imperva security specialist Ron Masas sniffed out a Google Photos bug devised to give hackers access to your personal information. Without going into technicalities, a hacker could take advantage of a Google Photos flaw to obtain the location, date, and user information contained within the photos.
Google Image use requires permission – nothing is for free. There are plagiarism laws for using others peoples text or ideas. If you want to use text or an image, permission has to be obtain from the ORIGINAL author or in the case of images, the original designer or photographer.
Assuming you are using an Android device, Google Photos only backs up the DCIM folder by default. This means that if you took a photo or video using your camera, it will be automatically backed up with Google Photos and will be available once you use another phone (assuming that the upload was completed).
The time has finally come: Google Photos has ended its unlimited free storage policy for photos and videos. Starting today, any new photos and videos you upload will count toward the free 15GB of storage that comes with every Google account.
Permanently deleted photos from your mobile phones or computer remain in the Trash folder of Google Photos for 60 days. If you had deleted the photos within the 60 days duration, you can restore them from the Trash folder on your computer or phone.
Any photos or videos you've backed up in High quality or Express quality before June 1, 2021 won't count toward your Google Account storage. Photos and videos backed up in Original quality will continue to count toward your Google Account storage.
Delete photos & videos
- On your computer, go to photos.google.com.
- Point at the item you want to delete. At the top left, click Select .
- At the top right, click Trash. Move to trash.
In the Google Photos app for Android, you'll find this setting under your Profile picture > Photo Settings > Back up & Sync > Upload size. If you have a current Google Pixel smartphone, the “Storage Saver” tier is unlimited for the life of your smartphone.
The Google Drive app should prompt you to switch before support ends on May 12, but you can also download Backup and Sync directly from Google. The change only applies to the desktop software; the Google Drive mobile apps for Android and iOS are unaffected.
Google Photos vs Amazon Photos: price and storage capacityBoth Amazon Photos and Google Photos offer a first slice of photo storage for free: anyone with an Amazon account gets 5GB of cloud capacity, while anyone with a Google account gets a more generous 15GB.
It might have been permanently deleted. If the photo has been in trash for more than 60 days, the photo might be gone. It may have been deleted from another app. If you use another photo gallery, and deleted photos there, it may have been deleted before Google Photos was able to back it up.
Here are the cloud storage options that let you store the most photos and videos for free:
- Google Drive. We lead off our list with Google Drive, which offers a whopping 15 GB of free cloud storage just for signing up for a Google account.
- MediaFire.
- pCloud.
- Microsoft OneDrive.
- Sync.com.
- Amazon Drive.
- Apple iCloud.
Google offers 15GB free storage space. This space is divided across Gmail, Google Drive and Photos. Under the earlier policy, photos at high or express resolution, which are both compressed formats, did not account towards free storage.
There are no photography-specific features, and everything you upload counts against your Google storage limits. Google Photos is a photo and video syncing and backup service. You can also do some basic photo editing. Compressed photos and videos don't count against your Google storage limits, but uncompressed ones do.
Free Up Space will remove all images (photos or videos) from your phone that have already been backed up to Google Photos (photos.google.com); Delete Device Copy will do the same but with selected images; deletion from Camera Gallery software, or any software other than the Google Photos App, will have no effect on