Google Photos offers you a great service – to automatically backup your photos and keep them on the cloud. However, at what price? Your privacy. Google can scan your photos, identify your face and track your location. No company should have this much information about you. Find out how to delete your Google photos.
Emily Green
Nov 25, 2019 · 4 min read
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Users are attracted to Google Photos by the unlimited storage capacity, cross-platform syncing, and sharing opportunities. Some might also enjoy its photo recognition AI, which identifies faces and objects in users’ photos and generates searchable tag words.
However, Google Photos’ data collection capabilities have expanded significantly since its launch in 2015. These same features can give Google some uncomfortably detailed insights into your life:
For some, this is a fair tradeoff. For others, this represents an unacceptable invasion of their privacy. If you’re determined to wipe your Google Photos account clean, read on below.
Google Photos creates two copies of your shots – one on your device and one on the app. This can take up a chunk of memory on your device. So if you are travelling, for example, and you ran out of space you may want to delete copies on your device but still keep them on the cloud. Just make sure that your photos have been synced.
If you have had enough of Google, you could delete photos from your cloud and all other synced devices but still keep them on your phone. The original images will stay in your Camera folder, which you can find under File Manager if you own an Android device or your Photo Gallery if you are an iPhone user. However, once the sync is enabled again, all photos will be synced and will reappear on your Google Photos account.
This might not be the best option if you haven’t saved your photos anywhere else, so if you want to keep them, back them up somewhere before you continue. 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.
Even if you deleted your photos from all devices and platforms, they still won’t be deleted permanently. This might be good news if you deleted them accidentally and want to retrieve them – or bad news if you want to get rid of them. Google Photos moves all your deleted photos and videos to the trash, which stay there for 60 days. After this period, they are deleted automatically.
To manage the photos in your bin:
Google Photos isn’t the most privacy-friendly cloud storage. Google scans and geo-tags your photos to create an even more accurate user profile and to serve you targeted ads. Google Drive has also been hacked on multiple occasions before, and the photos were used to blackmail celebrities.
Google Photos isn’t super user-friendly either. It makes photo management confusing, and without guides like this one, you might end up accidentally wiping your photos for good.
However, some alternatives care about your privacy. For example, NordLocker uses modern cryptography, like Argon2, AES256, ECC (with XChaCha20, EdDSA, and Poly1305), to protect your files from snoopers and it’s zero-knowledge policy ensures that you’ll be the only one who knows what’s in your locker.
To read more about alternatives to Google Photos, check out our blog post.
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