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The native image picker built into iOS allows app developers to access the full image library, with all its metadata
On iOS11 this has changed.
UIImagePickerController runs as a separate process and does not require Photos permission at all. Only the assets user selects on UIImagePickerController gets delivered to the app, in a one-time read-only way.
Selecting a photo (e.g. you want to upload an existing picture to a social network)
Granting full access to the photo library (e.g. Dropbox or Google Photos to backup your complete library)
The new behaviour on iOS11 is kind of what you (and we all :) ) want.
For Selecting a photo there is no permission at all, as I mentioned above.
From now on, Apple should enforce the use of UIImagePickerController instead of custom image picker UIs.
For Granting full access to the photo library, it still works as before.
So, an extra permission layer to access the metadata, as you suggested, would be good.
Thanks.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
On iOS11 this has changed.
UIImagePickerController runs as a separate process and does not require Photos permission at all. Only the assets user selects on UIImagePickerController gets delivered to the app, in a one-time read-only way.
https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2017/505/
The new behaviour on iOS11 is kind of what you (and we all :) ) want.
For
Selecting a photo
there is no permission at all, as I mentioned above.From now on, Apple should enforce the use of UIImagePickerController instead of custom image picker UIs.
For
Granting full access to the photo library
, it still works as before.So, an extra permission layer to access the metadata, as you suggested, would be good.
Thanks.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: