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How Google’s ‘Ask Photos’ uses AI to find the pictures you want

(5 months ago)
Kurt Knutsson, CyberGuy Report
TechnologyGoogleArtificial-intelligenceSmartphones

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Google Photos has introduced 'Ask Photos,' a new AI-powered search tool utilizing Google's Gemini AI model. This feature allows users to search their photo library using natural language queries, understanding context, dates, locations, and themes to find specific memories more easily. The rollout was paused earlier this year for improvements and has now resumed and expanded to more eligible users in the U.S.

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  1. 1 Earlier this year: Google paused the rollout of Ask Photos to address speed and quality issues.
  2. 2 Recently: Google resumed and expanded Ask Photos to more eligible users in the U.S.
  • Users can find specific memories more easily in their photo library.
  • Raises questions about AI analyzing personal photos and privacy concerns.
  • Changes the way users interact with their photo memories.
What: Google Photos has launched 'Ask Photos,' an AI-powered search tool that uses Google's Gemini AI to allow users to search their photo library with natural language queries.
When: The rollout was paused earlier this year to address speed and quality issues, and has now resumed and expanded to more users.
Where: Primarily in the U.S., expanding beyond early access testers.
Why: To enhance the user experience of Google Photos by enabling more intuitive and complex searches for images, moving beyond simple keywords to natural language understanding.
How: Ask Photos integrates Google's Gemini AI model, which analyzes photos for content, context, location, people, and quality. Users can ask complex questions, and the AI processes these to deliver relevant results, often alongside classic search results. Users can opt out of the feature.

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Google Photos has introduced 'Ask Photos,' a new AI-powered search tool utilizing Google's Gemini AI model. This feature allows users to search their photo library using natural language queries, understanding context, dates, locations, and themes to find specific memories more easily. The rollout was paused earlier this year for improvements and has now resumed and expanded to more eligible users in the U.S.