Co-founder of Indian social network Koo releases a new photo sharing app | TechCrunch
Briefly

Co-founder of Indian social network Koo releases a new photo sharing app | TechCrunch
"Bidawatka said that your friends probably have hundreds of photos of you that you don't have. Either they forgot to send you those photos, or they themselves have forgotten about those photos. PicSee cans faces in your camera gallery and picks out photos of your friends. "I've been thinking about the problem of personal photo sharing for years now," Bidawatka told TechCrunch over a call. "Last year, after we announced shutdown of Koo, I had time to rethink this problem and work on it again.""
"If your friends are on PicSee, you can send them a sharing request. Once they accept, they'll receive your first batch of photos of them. After that, the app will detect new photos of them in your camera roll and prompt you to send those, too. If you don't send them instantly, the app will automatically send those photos to them after 24 hours. Before that, you can review the photos that you are sending and choose not to send some."
Mayank Bidawatka, co-founder of Koo, released PicSee on iOS and Android as a photo-sharing app that automatically detects friends' faces in a user's camera roll. Users can send sharing requests to friends; once accepted, recipients receive an initial batch of photos. The app detects new photos of accepted friends, prompts users to send them, and will automatically send them after 24 hours if not manually sent. Photos are stored locally in the app's storage, can be downloaded to device storage, and can be recalled after sending to remove images from the receiver's PicSee.
Read at TechCrunch
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