Google Photos’ Unlimited Free Storage Could Clobber Apple’s Expensive iCloud
Google Photos’ Unlimited Free Storage Could Clobber Apple’s Expensive iCloud
How much does a terabyte of photo storage cost? On iCloud, $240 a year. Dropbox, $100. Microsoft OneDrive, $84. Flickr, $25.Google, $0. It’s free on desktop, Android, and iOS.
Today, Google announced its new Google Photos product, which offers unlimited free storage of photos and videos. The only limits are that photos must be under 16 megapixels, and video resolution is capped at 1080P.
If the photos and videos are bigger, Google will compress them, but says the visual quality is virtually untouched. With auto-backup from its iOS and Android apps, you can forget worrying about saving your photos, and you can forget paying to store them.

Photos Are A Computer Vision Goldmine
Essentially, Google is throwing its money around. It earns enough on search ads that it can completely subsidize photo storage as a long-term investment. Google knows that photos are a gold mine. They contain an immense amount of information about the people who took them that could be used to target ads and personalize experiences…if you have the tools to mine them.
Google
does. Its advanced computer vision, machine learning, artificial
intelligence, and other technologies will let it determine what people,
places, and things are in photos, and tie that data to your identity.
Pics of you with your favorite soda or a motorcycle could tell it what
to show you in ads. Locations ID’d by landmarks could help it predict
what you’re searching for. And selfies with friends could clue Google in
to who it should recommend you share something with.According to interviews with Google VP Bradley Horowitz by Backchannel’s Steven Levy, the computer vision isn’t perfect yet, but that’s kind of the point of this launch. “The key to getting that last percentage which tips it over will come now, when we deploy it at scale. Getting all that data will create a virtuous cycle of getting better and better,” Horowitz says.
Tech So Good It Doesn’t Need To Understand Us
By
tempting us with free storage, Google could get massive dumps of our
media that will educate its machine vision system while making its ads
and products better. And since you won’t want to move your massive
archive of memories, Google Photos could bind you tighter to its family
of apps and services. Some might worry about giving Google so much
information, but we’ve already let it host our email, and that hasn’t
turned out so badly.Google is often criticized for not “getting” humans. But Photos ties together some its most powerful technologies so it doesn’t have to. Storage, editing, organization and search all happen automatically. There’s no need for manually moving files, correcting colors, tagging subjects, or rifling through reams of pictures.
That’s what makes Google Photos perfect for the casual photographer. They don’t have to do anything but point and shoot to make memories that last forever, for free.
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