Finding something a bit troubling with my Samsung S8. The phone is putting together collages of various pics similar in nature, thinking I might want these. I don't, and if I do, I'll do it myself. But the real troubling part is the phone is analyzing content without my approval (knowingly) and what else is this thing doing...sending the content to who knows where?
Anybody else run into this? I've got an SD card in the phone with around 20,000 pictures....it's digging through all of that.
I've got Android locked down pretty tight on another brand (re. Google), now my pictures won't persist locally on the phone for long (days, 1 week max.). Might be fixable, but other things usually get in the way of me spending more time on this issue (a paying job, fixing personal transportation and houses.....).
Resistance is Futile....... Google is great (
I don't take that many pics with my phone. I've ended up shifting over to WhatsApp in the last while, for a few reasons. A critical pic that I want to keep I will send to my wife from WhatsApp - those then seem to persist on my phone, and MAY be secure enough to stay out of Google's reach <- Though today, that seems quaintly naive to say.....
Less convenient (the drug that keeps most people on their phones.....), but for high volume pictures, I'd stay with a large name dedicated camera line. I wouldn't stake my life on them not playing the same Let's sell your Data all over the Planet game too, with their current models, but if you can fully disable wifi on recent ones, you may have better luck than trying to play Jason Bourne against the cell phone monsters..... I run an older Canon Powershot that I really like, w/o wifi onboard - I get that this is not what many people want to haul around, even on vacation.
One final note on WhatsApp - I haven't done it yet, but I believe it will run comfortably on a PC (tablet.....) too. If you could live with manually sending pictures (and your data plan won't kill you) from your phone, you could store them off-board that way too.
Total Surveillance - it's here to stay.
Rgds, D.