Google added an option to their photo gallery app Picasa
Web Albums offering you to lock albums. The option is named “Sign-in required to
view,” meaning only people you share the album with are meant to access it, after signing
in with their Google account. The pictures themselves – like
this image from a sign-in album – are still technically public, though the URLs are
probably cryptic enough to stop people from simply guessing them (it might still be better to
password-protect even the image URL itself).
In the past, Google already offered (and continues to offer) what they call
“unlisted” albums, but those were troubled with privacy issues from time to time. For
instance, in the beginning you could simply try guessing the album title (say, a title like
“Private”) to get to the unlisted album. Recently, Google fixed a vulnerability with
how outgoing links were potentially passing on the unlisted album URL’s authentication key
to third-party sites due to the referrer field. Also, sometimes sharing just a single photo
caused you to potentially share access to the whole album. In fact, this issue remains even for
“sign-in” albums: when you select “Share Photo" for a single photo in a sign-in
album, the recipient will be able to view your full album.
In other news, Google Picasa software product manager Mike Horowitz has left
Google to join Fetch Technologies.
[Hat tip to Brinke, Wonder and Louis Gray!]
[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Locked Picasa Web Albums | Comments]
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