Credit: https://photoprism.app
Photography was a viable career path once upon a time. As a hobby, it was expensive, with steep outlays for even basic point-and-click compact cameras. A roll of decent quality 35mm film would set you back £4 in 1990 (equivalent to about a tenner in 2022 money), and you could add an extra £3.50 to get the film developed so you could actually see them in glorious 6x4 format. Professionals who chose to pour their creative juice into the field spent even more.
Then there were the years of training to learn about light levels, exposures and framing. And a high-end single lens reflex camera in the late 80s could easily cost as much as a two-bedroom terrace in Liverpool. But the extraordinary outlay would be made back with work in newspapers and magazines, at weddings, photoshoots, and fancy formal portrait sessions.
These days, the outlay is effectively zero. Almost everyone in the UK already has a phone with an inbuilt camera somewhere within three feet of them at all times (where are all the UFO photos?–ED). You don’t need to buy film or pay for developing, and the multilens monstrosities churned out by Apple, Samsung, and Huawei produce arguably better pictures than even the best professional equipment from previous decades.
Even storage is free. Instead of bursting the seams of a heavy oak steamer trunk in the attic, your photos are sorted, tagged and uploaded to the cloud – safe and accessible on Apple or Google servers.
Are your photos in safe hands?
However, trusting your photos to companies who watch everything you do and say, both online and in the real world, is unnerving – and perhaps a little naive. Can you be sure that no-one at Google HQ is ogling the lascivious images of