- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/36750563
Google confirms its latest update can scan all your photos to “use actual images of you and your loved ones” in AI image generation. That means Gemini seeing who you know and what you do. You likely have tens or hundreds of thousands of photos. They’re all exposed if you update.



I’m using Docker on a Raspberry Pi with a couple of RAID 1 SSDs attached. I’m running a DNLA server, torrent client, Immich, Webdav server, Pihole, and DDNS updater. It’s all reverse proxied using Traefik. It just chunters away, doing it’s thing. If you are careful about the setup and keep on top of updates, it’s pretty secure.
It’s not for beginners, but Immich is multi-user, so one person can set it up for their whole family and friends to use, share photos etc.
Thanks for the insights! But as I thought, this setup is the opposite of easy, unfortunately.
It’s comparatively easy compared to what it used to take to do this sort of thing. You only need basic Linux skills to get a full photo sharing system going. Everything can be installed from repositories and there isn’t much setting up to do.