Does Google Picasa store metadata in the pictures? Which metadata is actually stored in which isn't?
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Picasa writes tags and captions in the IPTC block (that is in the image file) if the file format supports it. http://picasa.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=15055 Since version 3 or so there is also a function to display an iptc tag as album. (I used that myself and verified that it is actually using iptc via irfanview) | |||||||
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I just tried this with Picasa 3.5.1, and the results were disturbing. In Picasa I changed the caption of a JPEG image from a Pentax K20D camera, then took a look at the file with a metadata utility to see what had been changed. Here is what I found:
So beware if you use Picasa to edit metadata. | |||||
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No, Picasa stores all metadata information in a database. From the Google Picasa Help pages here:
and here:
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Picasa stores its Caption and tags in the IPTC metadata of the jpg, and the GPS location information in the EXIF metadata. Try using Irfanview to look at the properties of any jpg that you have tagged and located. | |||
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The answers here that say that Picasa only stores metadata in its internal database and never in the image files are wrong. Picasa stores some metadata in both its own internal database, and in the image files themselves. As others have pointed out, its handling of image metadata leaves much to be desired. For example, Picasa 3.5 only supports IPTC metadata to the legacy IPTC-IIM standard. That standard was frozen in 1997. Picasa 3.5 does not yet support the preferred IPTC Core metadata standard, based on XMP. The IPTC Core standard was introduced in 2004. Five years on, and Picasa still hasn't caught up to the fact. | |||
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.DBfiles from Google in this location:C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Google\Picasa2\db3- for about 50GB of photos. Agree though that SOME info is stored as metadata in the photo itself. But not all! – Shackrock Apr 12 at 23:50