> If the photos are hosted on Google's servers, they have every right to scan whatever they want.
Google is trying to get people arrested because Android backed up their personal photo libraries to Google Photos.
> The day after Mark’s troubles started, the same scenario was playing out in Texas. A toddler in Houston had an infection in his “intimal parts,” wrote his father in an online post that I stumbled upon while reporting out Mark’s story. At the pediatrician’s request, Cassio, who also asked to be identified only by his first name, used an Android to take photos, which were backed up automatically to Google Photos. He then sent them to his wife via Google’s chat service.
> Not scanning for CSAM on your own servers isn't a realistic expectation.
Google isn't just scanning for known examples of kiddie porn, they have developed an algorithm that scans for any image of naked children and, as usual, there doesn't seem to be a human in the loop when their algorithm makes a bad call.
It's Google's servers. I imagine every content hosting company has a heuristics based approach to detecting CSAM. Google has a habit of tuning moderation algorithms for false positives rather than missed positives.
Not having a human in the loop is terrible and a problem frequently when it comes to getting support from Google companies. That's a separate issue from Google or Dropbox being able to scan unencrypted files for CSAM. Google's policy of automating as much as it can has tons of downsides. But it's understandable when you look at the scale Google functions.
It's important to separate the policy of scanning from Google's terrible appeal process and the algorithm false positives.
I would feel differently if the story was that Android scanned an outgoing SMS or a photo saved locally. I am not sure where the balance point is to identify and report CSAM while also respecting user's rights to privacy.
> It's Google's servers. I imagine every content hosting company has a heuristics based approach to detecting CSAM.
The slippery slope claim made in the past was that they were only looking for files that match known examples of kiddie porn.
For instance, this tech from Microsoft:
>PhotoDNA creates a unique digital signature (known as a “hash”) of an image which is then compared against signatures (hashes) of other photos to find copies of the same image. When matched with a database containing hashes of previously identified illegal images, PhotoDNA is an incredible tool to help detect, disrupt and report the distribution of child exploitation material.
Reporting parents to police because they took pictures of their child's first bath and those photos were automatically backed up to Google servers is much, much worse.
Please stop using 'child's first bath' as an indicator of overreaction by the algorithm. It is not helpful to argue something which will make you look hyperbolic or histrionic once your argument is looked into.
1. The picture(s) in question mentioned above which got an account shut down and police notified was not a 'child in a bath', it was close ups of a child's genitals
2. You are probably not a parent since a child's 'first bath' is not a thing. They are bathed as infants starting immediately. If you are referring to a child's first independent bath, then no one should be taking pictures since private bathing is not something that should be intruded upon for picture taking
> 2. You are probably not a parent since a child's 'first bath' is not a thing. They are bathed as infants starting immediately. If you are referring to a child's first independent bath, then no one should be taking pictures since private bathing is not something that should be intruded upon for picture taking
Are you a parent? A prudish parent perhaps?
I have pictures of me as a kid in a bath (genitals obscured underwater). It's a common parental thing among parents who AREN'T DRIED UP PRUDES AND FRIGHTED OF NUDITY.
The bottom line is - another case of our ability to use our technology as we desire being interrupted and interfered with. I hate to even remotely invoke RMS, but... He wasn't wrong!
Please re-read what I wrote. Was it really unclear? I said that if a child is bathing independently that it is not appropriate to barge in and take pictures of them. They would be at least 5 or 6 years old at that point. Is that prudish? Why is everyone so emotional about this? All I said was that it was a terrible and inaccurate argument to talk about pictures of a child in a bath because that is not what flagged the algorithm and there is no such thing as a child's first bath.
Please try to parse a response before yelling at someone for something they didn't state.
> 1. The picture(s) in question mentioned above which got an account shut down and police notified was not a 'child in a bath', it was close ups of a child's genitals
No, the example of Google calling the police on a parent given in the NYT article was because the parent sought medical assistance for their child during lockdown and the doctor requested pictures of the issue the child was having.
This is no more an acceptable reason for Google to report parents to the police for child abuse than taking pictures of your child's first bath, and taking pictures of your child's milestones has long been something that people have done.
>> 1. The picture(s) in question mentioned above which got an account shut down and police notified was not a 'child in a bath', it was close ups of a child's genitals
> No, the example of Google calling the police on a parent given in the NYT article was because the parent sought medical assistance for their child during lockdown and the doctor requested pictures of the issue the child was having.
These things are not mutually exclusive.
Stop being defensive. It doesn't help you. I am trying to help you by telling you that you are making a shitty argument.
> I am trying to help you by telling you that you are making a shitty argument.
OK. Allow me to tell you that, in my opinion, you are the person making the shitty argument
Your argument that "no one should be taking pictures" of their child's first bath is just cringe-worthy.
Google is to blame for the situation when they call the police over a single false positive from their faulty algorithm, not parents who take pictures of their own children.
Are you even reading what I am writing? I never said that no one should take pictures of their children's first bath -- I said that there is no such thing as a child's first bath, just like there is no such thing as a child's first meal, or a child's first nap, or a child's first bowel movement. They are given baths as infants.
You are obviously either unable or unwilling to parse what I am trying to tell you, and fixated on this notion that you have to be 'right' no matter what even though I am not telling you that you are wrong!
I am at a loss as to what to reply to you with besides I urge you to read things before continuing to respond because otherwise you end up talking around people instead of with them.
How do you take a photo on android to only store it locally?
The whole photos experience on Android has been simplified to break that distinction and there is no way to even really know or realize what is happening - BY DESIGN.
The real answer here is, again, Android is not privacy first by default.
BTW parents taking medical pictures of their children != CSAM which is an acronym for "Child Sexual Abuse Material"... Taking care of your child's medical problem isn't "sexual abuse" despite the conflation of the two people are glossing over in this thread.
I installed an offline gallery and disabled Google Photos. For years and years Samsung android phones didn't have the option of cloud backups.
There's a very clear distinction between local and cloud, every single photo taken using any camera app is local only. Galleries, like Google Photos, and backup services like Dropbox have an explicit setting to enable cloud backup. Google Photo backup is very distinctly different from Google Drive and phone backups in general.
I use FolderSync to sync it with a self hosted NextCloud instance. If I am travelling, I prefer using Syncthing, a wifi file server running off the phone, or a physical wire to transfer photos. I know exactly what pictures are sent where and backed up with what method. I am not sure why you believe Android treats photo and file management like a black box, I don't believe Apple does either. Apple iOS devices are much more difficult to manually backup as they only allow background photo sync to iCloud, if the screen is turned off syncing to a third party will most likely fail. But there is a straightforward toggle to disable Photos backup to iCloud.
Android file management is superior to any other mobile OS. Android is file privacy first by design, as long as you are comfortable managing backup and syncing with self-hosted and self-managed solutions. I have gone the additional step of rooting my phone as well to get around any Android limitations on what folders certain apps have access to.
No one is arguing against the last point you made. No one was conflating the two.
> There's a very clear distinction between local and cloud, every single photo taken using any camera app is local only.
>Android is file privacy first by design
Yet we have the NYTimes article stating that the only ways Google could have access to the photos they tried to have a parent arrested for would be to scan content on the device, scan automatic backups, or spy on the text messages sent from the device.
The examples in the story were parents sharing images directly with their doctor, not the with the general public.
There are many examples of Google's automated systems making egregious mistakes while scanning user data with no human in the loop to review the decision.
>Ed Francis studies the evolution of military technology over at his YouTube channel, Armoured Archives. But this week, Francis says five years’ worth of research stored on Google Drive has become inaccessible thanks to Google’s automated error.
Francis says the file in question was simply a collection of data on various tanks for a coming video on how military vehicles have evolved across historical conflicts. But Google’s automated systems deemed the file a terrorist threat, resulting in a complete lockdown of his YouTube, GMail, and Google Drive accounts.
I remember that story, I came across a post asking people to upvote the support ticket on the r/datahoarder subreddit by a fan on the 17th. I came across it and cross posted a link on hacker news on the 22nd in the evening and by the following morning the account was restored and taken care of. I can't say for sure how much posting it here helped, but based on the timeline I think it made a difference. I believe it was also one of the highest upvoted stories of that day.
What stood out to me what one of the first couple comments in the support thread was the contact information for the Museum Director of the Swedish Tank Museum.
My unconfirmed theory is that Google's OCR pdf service flagged specific text and pages in the pdf of tank plans and repair manuals as they are considered classified and shouldn't be in the public unredacted. It's historically significant and absolutely worth preserving, but I can see why it might get flagged.
This was also interesting in that it got the entire account taken down. Usually Google flags a file and disables sharing completely. Google disabled sharing backups of a recent Kanye interview that was filled with hate speech called "Kanye champs removed video.mp4". I have not watched it but it was my first time seeing something removed because it "may violate Google Drive's Hate Speech Policy. Some features related to this file were restricted."
I am not sure if it was the post to HN or various videos other made that helped, but it made me realize that the one of the best ways to get in touch with a human at Google is posting here on HN and that Google will continue to become more aggressive with scanning files.
Section 230 was modified by FOSTA-SESTA when related to hosting sexual solicitation, and EARN IT is back under review by congress which would effectively make E2EE illegal and make hosts liable for illegal content uploaded by its users.
Would scanning be okay if there is a government entity with a human you can appeal to that would override any flags made by automated systems? No corporation wants more government oversight, and the only way to avoid it is to do good faith self policing. EARN IT would receive a lot more support if the public sentiment changes to believe Google and Apple and other hosts intentionally choose to ignore problematic materials. Reddit is criticized often because it allowed problematic subreddits to grow. I am not sure where things will end up.
I'm not defending this at all, but one of the reasons why there are no (or few) humans that can be contacted is that they* said that it was tried before and it caused a lot more issues with mistakes/takeovers due to social engineering.
* Can't remember who said it but it was at a town hall this year
> one of the reasons why there are no (or few) humans that can be contacted is that they* said that it was tried before
This just sounds like yet another excuse for holding payroll down as much as possible.
If I am a customer of Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Walmart or any number of the other companies with a similar market cap, I can get access to real live human beings who provide customer support.
Google is trying to get people arrested because Android backed up their personal photo libraries to Google Photos.
> The day after Mark’s troubles started, the same scenario was playing out in Texas. A toddler in Houston had an infection in his “intimal parts,” wrote his father in an online post that I stumbled upon while reporting out Mark’s story. At the pediatrician’s request, Cassio, who also asked to be identified only by his first name, used an Android to take photos, which were backed up automatically to Google Photos. He then sent them to his wife via Google’s chat service.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/21/technology/google-surveil...
> Not scanning for CSAM on your own servers isn't a realistic expectation.
Google isn't just scanning for known examples of kiddie porn, they have developed an algorithm that scans for any image of naked children and, as usual, there doesn't seem to be a human in the loop when their algorithm makes a bad call.