ATTENTION ALL GIRLS check out the IPhone Brassiere folder
"Brassiere" why are apple saving these photos in a folder?
IPhone users found that their smartphones store photos in their underwear in a separate folder, reports The Daily Mail . You can find them on the appropriate request.

@ellieeewbu
However, some users were shocked to learn that this applies to intimate shots, for example, if the girl is depicted in a Brassiere.
According to TechCrunch, an automatic feature has been categorizing your pictures for over a year following a June 2016 iOS update.
The computer vision tech used by Apple runs natively on your iPhone or iPad, meaning that it doesn’t require you to upload all the images to the cloud. In can recognize faces in your photos and group by person, but it also has advanced object recognition, making it possible to find images of any number of different things from your distant past. In other words: your phone now knows if you have taken photos of food, or horses, or mountains, to make retrieval of these images much, much easier.
According to Apple, your phone does more than 11bn computations per photo to recognize who and what is featured in the image.
IPhone users found that their smartphones store photos in their underwear in a separate folder, reports The Daily Mail . You can find them on the appropriate request.
ATTENTION ALL GIRLS check out the IPhone Brassiere folder
@ellieeewbu
the user Twitter @ellieeewbu wrote on Tweeter: ATTENTION ALL GIRLS ALL GIRLS!!! Go to your photos and type in the ‘Brassiere’ why are apple saving these and made it a folder!!?!!?
In fact, and using the technology of data recognition, devices Apple and Android can accurately determine what is in the gallery. They can classify photos by tag "dog", "food", "sunglasses". When users search for pictures in the Photos app on the iPhone, the requested photos appear in a separate folder.
However, some users were shocked to learn that this applies to intimate shots, for example, if the girl is depicted in a Brassiere.
According to TechCrunch, an automatic feature has been categorizing your pictures for over a year following a June 2016 iOS update.
The computer vision tech used by Apple runs natively on your iPhone or iPad, meaning that it doesn’t require you to upload all the images to the cloud. In can recognize faces in your photos and group by person, but it also has advanced object recognition, making it possible to find images of any number of different things from your distant past. In other words: your phone now knows if you have taken photos of food, or horses, or mountains, to make retrieval of these images much, much easier.
According to Apple, your phone does more than 11bn computations per photo to recognize who and what is featured in the image.
Comments
Post a Comment