Google has confirmed that some people using its Takeout service to download a copy of their data last year had content from their Google Photos account shared with complete strangers by accident.
As 9to5Google reports, the ātechnical issueā happened from November 21to 25 2019, but Google is only now alerting potentially affected users by email.
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[li]Weāve rounded up the best free photo editors[/li][li]Weāve hand-picked the best free apps for Android[/li][li]Weāve also rounded up the best free Android games[/li][/ul]
The problem involved videos (not still pictures), which were accidentally exported to other usersā archives if they happened to be backing up their content at the same time as you.
Affected users have received quite vague emails, simply informing them that āone or more videos in your Google Photos account was affected by this issueā without specifying which ones, or how many people were given access.
Google also advises that backups downloaded during this timeframe might be incomplete, so itās worth checking and re-saving them to ensure your archives arenāt missing any snaps.
Better late than never?
Google says itās carried out an in-depth analysis to root out the cause of the problem and ensure it doesnāt happen again.
Only a tiny fraction of Google Photos users were affected by the bug (approximately 0.01% according to Googleās own estimates) and the company resolved the problem after a few days, but itās alarming that itās taken over two months for people whose videos were shared to be alerted.
[ul]
[li]Back up your photos on one of the best SSDs of 2020[/li][/ul]
Continue readingā¦
As 9to5Google reports, the ātechnical issueā happened from November 21to 25 2019, but Google is only now alerting potentially affected users by email.
[ul]
[li]Weāve rounded up the best free photo editors[/li][li]Weāve hand-picked the best free apps for Android[/li][li]Weāve also rounded up the best free Android games[/li][/ul]
The problem involved videos (not still pictures), which were accidentally exported to other usersā archives if they happened to be backing up their content at the same time as you.
Affected users have received quite vague emails, simply informing them that āone or more videos in your Google Photos account was affected by this issueā without specifying which ones, or how many people were given access.
Google also advises that backups downloaded during this timeframe might be incomplete, so itās worth checking and re-saving them to ensure your archives arenāt missing any snaps.
Better late than never?
Google says itās carried out an in-depth analysis to root out the cause of the problem and ensure it doesnāt happen again.
Only a tiny fraction of Google Photos users were affected by the bug (approximately 0.01% according to Googleās own estimates) and the company resolved the problem after a few days, but itās alarming that itās taken over two months for people whose videos were shared to be alerted.
[ul]
[li]Back up your photos on one of the best SSDs of 2020[/li][/ul]
Continue readingā¦