Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Photography
  4. News

Google Photos could soon fix acne better than your skincare routine

Removing blemishes may just be a tap away, and pimples will vanish, too.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Photos on the Pixel 9a.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

What’s happened? Google Photos appears to be working on a new AI photo editing tool that could help users easily retouch faces to remove blemishes.

  • A teardown of Google Photos version 7.49 has surfaced evidence of a new “Face retouch” feature currently in development.
  • According to strings of code first spotted by Android Authority, this tool could allow users to correct or enhance facial attributes in photos.
  • Keywords in the code suggest that the tool may help users fix acne, dark circles, eye bags, teeth, and other blemishes.
  • While we haven’t seen it in action yet, the tool could work like the app’s Magic Editor feature, letting users highlight blemishes they want fixed.

Why is this important? Users currently have to rely on third-party apps to retouch faces in photos. This tool could fill that gap in Google Photos’ already impressive arsenal of image editing tools and offer users a more well-rounded experience.

  • Although Google’s Camera app already has Face retouching capabilities, it offers limited functionality, only works for portrait images and selfies, and is exclusive to Pixel devices.
  • Users have to rely on third-party apps like FaceApp for more comprehensive edits.
  • Baking a Face retouch option right into Google Photos will eliminate the need for a separate app, give more users access to the functionality, and allow users to edit any photo retroactively.
Recommended Videos

Why should I care? With a built-in face retouch feature, Google Photos could help you level up your selfies with minimal effort.

  • In addition to saving you time and effort on retouching selfies, the tool could also eliminate the need for a separate app.
  • Thanks to Google Photos’ broad user base, the functionality will become accessible to a wider audience.

OK, what’s next? Since the feature is still in early stages of development, it may be a while before it lands on your phone. Once it does, we’re eager to see how well it performs in real-world use. For Face retouch to be a true game-changer, the edits will need to be flexible, letting users toggle adjustments, control intensity, and maintain a natural look.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
Here’s a cool new app for people who treat every photo dump like a magazine spread
Mocha Frame is a tiny app makes every photo to look curated
Mocha Frame is a new iOS app

You're probably not a stranger to filters for your social media uploads. While some apps just fix up your shots with minor touch-ups, others want to change the entire look and feel. Mocha Frame takes things a little further. It doesn't just clean up your shots; it lets you frame them up or sign them before sharing them.

Mocha Frame, highlighted in a Reddit post by its developer, is an iPhone app built around presentation rather than heavy edits. The developer describes it as a tool for giving photos a cleaner, more elegant look before sharing, with minimal frames, Polaroid-style frames, creative collage layouts, and themed frames for different moods and festivals.

Read more
I tried turning the Red Magic 11S Pro into a handheld console, and it worked almost too well
Pushing Red Magic's liquid cooled gaming phone past the normal smartphone limit
Red Magic 11S Pro Review

One look at the Red Magic 11S Pro, and you can tell it's not trying to be subtle. This isn’t chasing the overly polished look and feel of a modern flagship smartphone. It isn’t trying to convince you it’s a great camera phone, either. This thing looks like it escaped from the desk of someone who still thinks transparent electronics are the peak of industrial design.

Many phones call themselves gaming phones, then spend half their time trying to look normal. The Red Magic 11S Pro has no such insecurity. The transparent back looks absolutely bonkers, with visible liquid cooling, RGB lighting, a flat glass-and-metal body, and a design that lives or dies by the fact that you either love gaming hardware or you don’t. The Nightfreeze unit I tested looked sleek.

Read more
The memory crisis isn’t going to ease, and you will pay the price for it, says a research firm
Forty to 50% higher this quarter, 30 to 40% more next quarter, and no real relief until 2028. Plan accordingly.
RAM memory chips

If you were hoping the memory crisis was about to ease up, I have some bad news for you. It comes directly from Wall Street.

Your next smartphone, laptop, or tablet could cost even more, regardless of whether it has recently been subject to a price hike.

Read more