Google Photos brings its prompt-based editing feature to India, Australia and Japan | TechCrunch
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Google Photos brings its prompt-based editing feature to India, Australia and Japan | TechCrunch
"Users in these newly supported countries will now see a "Help me Edit" box when they tap the edit option on a photo. From there, they can either select from suggested prompts or type their own requests in plain language. For example, you could ask the app to "remove the motorcycle in the background," "reduce the background blur," or use a more general command like "restore this old photo.""
"The AI can handle surprisingly specific requests too. You can ask it to edit a friend's pose, remove their glasses, or even have them open their eyes in a photo where they blinked. The feature uses Google's Nano Banana image model to transform photos, and all the processing happens directly within the app without requiring an internet connection for the actual editing."
Google is expanding natural-language editing in Google Photos to additional countries including Australia, India, and Japan. Users will see a "Help me Edit" box when tapping the edit option and can choose suggested prompts or type plain-language requests such as removing objects, reducing blur, or restoring old photos. The AI handles specific edits like changing poses, removing glasses, or opening closed eyes. The feature uses Google's Nano Banana image model and performs processing on-device without an internet connection. The tool works on Android devices with 4GB RAM running Android 8.0+, supports several Indian languages, and adds C2PA Content Credentials metadata for AI edits.
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