![]() Note from 2023: Mack Talcott alerted me to his Google Photos Deduper, which does the kinds of image comparisons that I wanted and achieves actual deletion of duplicates by doing UI automation of the web interface. It did suggest an approach I could take to do this myself though, by using the public Google Photos API. I did discover Rémi Mikel’s duplicate finding tool which seemed like a step in the right direction, but seemed to perform too badly to be very useful (probably because there are thousands of images that I want to get rid of, and it tries to display all of them in your browser). They’re trying to sell me something that doesn’t do what I want.The official duplicate finding tool doesn’t appear to look at visual similarity, so misses the thumbnails I want to remove.I don’t have duplicates on my local computer, and want to clean up the duplicates in the Google library so it’s easier to browse (and to save some space).Doing a web search for “Google Photos remove duplicates” mostly gives back content farm-style articles that talk about how Photos provides some duplicate-finding features (yes, but they’re limited) and usually go on to suggest some nonfree application for finding duplicates on your local computer. There aren’t many existing options for managing duplicate items like this. I have previously ignored the duplicates in alternate formats because they weren’t too annoying, but when the sync tool uploaded a few thousand duplicate thumbnails I felt the need to do something about it. While Google’s sync tool does know how to avoid uploading exact duplicates of photos, it doesn’t do any similarity matching on image content, so thumbnails (with the same content but lower resolution) and alternate formats (sidecar JPEGs that go along with camera raw files) end up duplicated in the Google Photos library. It seems this wasn’t a problem with the old “ Backup and Sync” application because it supported excluding some files from backup (so I could have it ignore the directory that thumbnails get put into), but the new Drive application lacks such a feature. I recently had a bit of a problem with the files that had ended up in Google Photos on my account: the Google Drive desktop synchronization app seemed to have noticed the many (reasonably-high-resolution) thumbnails that my local photo management application (Lightroom) creates, and had uploaded many near-duplicate images. Managing Google Photos duplicates with Python 30 April, 2022
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