allow hidden photos
Submitted by Adam Dingle
Link to original bug (#717321)
Description
---- Reported by adam@yorba.org 2011-03-21 07:51:00 -0700 ----
Original Redmine bug id: 3384
Original URL: http://redmine.yorba.org/issues/3384
Searchable id: yorba-bug-3384
Original author: Adam Dingle
Original description:
Early versions of Shotwell allowed the user to hide photos. When we added the 1-5 star rating system, we also added a rating Rejected, which replaced the notion of hidden photos. Some users would still like to be able to hide certain photos, independently of whether those photos are rejected or have any other rating. See, for example
http://lists.yorba.org/pipermail/shotwell/2011-March/001922.html
Related issues:
- duplicated by shotwell - 5331: [feature request] private photos (Duplicate)
---- Additional Comments From shotwell-maint@gnome.bugs 2013-05-21 11:38:00 -0700 ----
History
Comment 1
Updated by Ivan Sagalaev over 2 years ago
Wanted to dump some thoughts on this to make sure it won't get overlooked:
- Hidden state should apply not only to individual photos but to events as well. I.e. an event with only hidden photos should also be completely hidden, including event tree in the sidebar (event title may be private/sensitive).
- If an event has a mix of hidden/public photos and a hidden photo is set as its key photo it should be replaced with a default public when displayed in normal mode.
- Unlocking hidden view should require some level of protection from accidental triggering, like asking for a password. It shouldn't necessarily use a cryptographically strong storage, just be a fool-proof.
Thanks!
Comment 2
Updated by Joseph - over 2 years ago
It might also be nice to be able to hide a tag. Especially with boolean operators. That way you can search for things like “detroit -autoshowâ€. Thinking about the hidden idea, it might also be nice to be able to hide a tag. i.e. adding all photos with a given tag to the hidden set. And how about having all photos with leading dots or in directories with leading dots default to hidden.
-Joe
Comment 3
Updated by Petros Tsantoulis over 2 years ago
- Description updated (diff)
- Priority changed from Low to High
I really like shotwell, but the absence of a "hidden" feature is REALLY a deal-breaker for me. I'm not talking about extreme
porn or top-secret stuff, but imagine current girlfriend perusing photos from vacations with ex-girlfriend. Or imagine my mother
seeing photos from crazy night with my buddies. Or imagine invited guests from work wanting to see some photos from my last
business trip in Amsterdam and seeing ... etc.
To further refine the ideas written above, I think we can go a step further. So, instead of having
only degrees of quality (rating), one could have degrees of privacy for each photo. So some photos are "ultra sensitive"
(ideally encrypted and never shown without password), others are "sensitive" (never uploaded, by default not shown)
and yet others are "public". I guess 3-4 degrees of privacy should do the trick.
I can live without an enhance feature (there is gimp for that) or complicated search queries for my 18000 photos. But if need to start
deleting stuff or hiding directories or manually moving photos around, then a photo organiser is really irrelevant and I can go back
to using "xv".
Thanks for your time and for this otherwise excellent piece of software!
Comment 4
Updated by Eric Gregory over 2 years ago
- Priority changed from High to Low
Comment 5
Updated by Lucas Beeler over 2 years ago
@Petros -- does the rating mechanism not provide some degree of visibility control in the use cases you're talking about?
Comment 6
Updated by Adam Dingle over 2 years ago
- Priority changed from Low to Normal
I think that Petros (and others) want a privacy level which is independent of the rating mechanism. A rating indicates a photo's quality, which is not the same as its privacy/sensitivity.
Note that multiple libraries (e.g. specified with 'shotwell -d') might be another way to solve this problem using an existing mechanism.
Comment 7
Updated by Petros Tsantoulis over 2 years ago
Lucas Beeler wrote:
bq.
@Petros -- does the rating mechanism not provide some degree of visibility control in the use cases you're talking about?
Of course, that's what I'm using right now (although I had to archive some photos). But it is not fine grained control (ie some photos are very sensible and some photos are OK for almost everyone except my boss). Furthermore, I prefer to think that reject applies in the sense of photo "quality" rather than privacy. A photo that is not beautiful or has some technical flaw can be kept in the database but "rejected' due to its quality, in case it is needed later. This is not the same as rejecting a photo that is very beautiful but private. So if possible (a) make quality and privacy distinct, (b) allow multiple levels of privacy.
Anyway, thanks for responding so quickly.
Comment 8
Updated by Piergiorgio Traversin over 1 year ago
- Description updated (diff)
Any news on this one?
Just a tag (e.g. 'hidden') that by default makes the photos not visible will do, for the moment.
Comment 9
Updated by Lucas Beeler over 1 year ago
This is open source, so patches are always welcome! ;-)
Comment 10
Updated by Weiwu Zhang 6 months ago
In an undated article of this website, the feature is introduced:
http://redmine.yorba.org/projects/shotwell/wiki/UsingShotwell04
The article says:
"If you don't want to see a photo but still want to keep it in your library, you can hide it by selecting it and choosing Photos -> Hide. To see hidden photos, toggle the menu item View -> Hidden Photos. Once visible, hidden photos have a red X in the lower right corner. You can unhide selected photos by choosing Photos -> Unhide."
I checked my shotwell 0.14.1. It doesn't have the described buttons and menu items. Can someone correct that article?
(Oh how I am averse towards undated article. The world is changing in such a pace and undated articles are dis-informative: it only wastes time for readers who are looking for information.)
Comment 11
Updated by Joe Bylund 6 months ago
This bug is still open, so this issue is unresolved. That said, marking a photo as rejected hides the photo, there are a couple of ways to do this:
-
right click, -> rating -> rejected
-
photos -> set rating -> rejected
-
just select the photo and press "9" on the keyboard
The article you reference is about Shotwell 0.4. Hopefully you will find the answers to other questions you might have at: http://yorba.org/shotwell/help/
Comment 12
Updated by Ivan Sagalaev 6 months ago
Joy, in the first comment (http://redmine.yorba.org/issues/3384#note-1) I described all of the things that marking "Rejected" doesn't do for this feature. So it's not really a good workaround.
Comment 13
Updated by Jim Nelson 6 months ago
- Description updated (diff)
- Category set to library-mode
Weiwu, that wiki page is quite old -- it's describing Shotwell 0.4, and we just released 0.14. I've marked the page (and other old reference material) as out-of-date, although I won't delete it for archival purposes.
--- Bug imported by chaz@yorba.org 2013-11-25 21:51 UTC ---
This bug was previously known as bug 3384 at http://redmine.yorba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3384
Unknown version " in product shotwell. Setting version to "!unspecified". Unknown milestone "unknown in product shotwell. Setting to default milestone for this product, "---". Setting qa contact to the default for this product. This bug either had no qa contact or an invalid one. Resolution set on an open status. Dropping resolution
Resolution: RESOLVED FIXED