Skip to main content

Apple explores how to create a group selfie when no one’s nearby

Apple has just been granted a patent outlining an idea for creating group selfies without everyone having to crowd around a single camera to get the shot.

The tech giant calls the feature a “synthetic group selfie” that would be created automatically on an iPhone or iPad using single-person selfies submitted by those who want to appear in the group picture.

Recommended Videos

In the patent, Apple describes a synthetic group selfie as “an arrangement or composition of individual selfies obtained from a plurality of computing devices into a single group image.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

It says the individual selfie images could include still images, as well as stored video images, or even livestreaming images.

Apple

Once collected together, the Apple device would automatically arrange the individual selfies into a group picture.

The patent, granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and spotted by Patently Apple, says that the synthetic group selfie can be “stored as a multi-resource object that preserves the individual selfie images so that the user who created the synthetic group selfie or a recipient of the synthetic group selfie can modify the arrangement of the individual selfies within the synthetic group selfie.” In other words, the feature would allow anyone with the synthetic group selfie on their device to arrange the positioning of the people in the shot.

Now, you might be thinking that the patent has come in response to the coronavirus pandemic where getting up close and personal with others outside of your home is behavior that’s still discouraged, with social distancing recommended where possible. But Apple actually filed the patent in 2018, with the USPTO granting it in recent days.

As always, we should point out that at this stage the feature probably still exists solely as an idea on the pages of a document, so there’s no guarantee it will ever make it onto an iPhone or iPad. But with the current pandemic serving to generate extra interest around the idea, it’s certainly something that Apple’s top team may wish to explore as a way of helping friends and family to connect when circumstances keep them apart.

Digital Trends has reached out to Apple to ask for more information about its synthetic group selfie and whether it’s considering developing the idea, and we will update this article when we hear back.

Need tips for taking the perfect selfie? Digital Trends has you covered.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
iOS 18 is about to make Apple Maps better than ever
Two iPhones showing a comparison between Google Maps and Apple Maps.

Google Maps (left) versus Apple Maps (right) Jesse Hollington / Digital Trends

Apple Maps has finally gotten a fundamental but heavily requested and long-awaited feature: the ability to “Search Here” on Apple Maps. The new button comes with the rollout of iOS 18, and it allows you to search for a specific location on the map when it isn’t in your current location.

Read more
Apple’s AI features for the iPhone just hit a major roadblock
Summarization of notification and emails on iPhone with Apple Intelligence.

Earlier this week, the EU’s competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, told CNBC that Apple had some “very serious” issues as it tries to comply with the landmark Digital Markets Act (DMA) tech legislation. These were the rules that finally forced Apple to open iPhones for alternative app stores, allow external browser engines, and enable third-party payment options, among other things. It seems those rules also mean the best of iOS 18 won’t make it to the EU bloc either.

Apple has confirmed that a trio of crucial iPhone upgrades that it announced at WWDC 2024 earlier this month won't appear on iPhones in the EU later this year. The biggest of those would be Apple Intelligence, the suite of AI features deeply integrated within iOS 18 that are aimed at redefining what iPhones can do in the age of generative AI tools like Google’s Gemini and Microsoft’s Copilot.

Read more
Apple is working on a futuristic iPhone feature that sounds too good to be true
A person holding the Apple iPhone 15 Plus.

Apple’s numerous teams are constantly working on innovative projects and regularly file new patents for them. One of the company’s recent patents pertains to a new feature for the iPhone that, if brought to fruition, could significantly transform how we use our mobile devices.

Patently Apple recently discovered a new patent that covers a concept for a new iPhone that would allow you to replace the standard back panel with something else. In other words, it would add modularization to the iPhone.

Read more