Most social media users in general and Twitter users in particular suffer from a lower quality of images when uploading due to the pressure algorithms used on these platforms, but Twitter is about to change that! The company announced this week that it has started operating according to a new system that maintains the quality of the JPEG file, where engineer Nolan O'Brien announced on Twitter this week that the social media platform will now maintain JPEG files with a quality of up to 97% as the uploaded images will follow a codec called Guetzli, which was developed by Google two years ago and is capable of producing small files of high quality.
The new system provides photographers more control over the quality of the image that appears on Twitter, in other words it allows them to post a high or low quality image and some professional photographers may for example publish a low-quality version on purpose in an attempt to protect it from misuse, O'Brien confirmed The images that appear on the platform will not display EXIF data for the image, which can be read by a specific program and provide information about the image such as the camera, lens, aperture and speed used to take the photo, as well as the time and location of photography that photographers often do not prefer to share.
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The new system provides photographers more control over the quality of the image that appears on Twitter, in other words it allows them to post a high or low quality image and some professional photographers may for example publish a low-quality version on purpose in an attempt to protect it from misuse, O'Brien confirmed The images that appear on the platform will not display EXIF data for the image, which can be read by a specific program and provide information about the image such as the camera, lens, aperture and speed used to take the photo, as well as the time and location of photography that photographers often do not prefer to share.
Share your opinion on "You will not suffer from low image quality anymore on Twitter!"
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