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Canon Camera Connect

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Contents7
  1. Consumer impact summary
  2. Incidents
  3. Online account requirement
  4. Full access to photo library (iOS)
  5. Location permission (iOS)
  6. See also
  7. References


Canon Camera Connect
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Basic Information
Release Year 2015
Product Type Mobile app
In Production Yes
Official Website https://www.usa.canon.com/mobile-apps/camera-connect


Canon Camera Connect is a mobile app for iOS and Android that connects to Bluetooth- and Wi-Fi-equipped Canon cameras to enable remote shooting, geotagging, and media transfer to smartphones. Since version 3.4.0, released in April 2025, the app requires a mandatory Canon ID login for all features, including local image transfer and remote shutter control that previously worked without an account or internet connection.[1]

Canon Camera Connect was released in 2015, replacing two earlier apps: Canon CameraWindow (for compact cameras) and EOS Remote (for EOS cameras).[2] The app is compatible with Wi-Fi-capable Canon cameras released from 2012 onward and supports JPEG, MP4, MOV, CR3, and CR2 file formats.[3]

Consumer impact summary

Canon Camera Connect requires a mandatory online account for features that operate entirely over local peer-to-peer Wi-Fi,[1] demands full access to the iOS photo library when the operating system provides a privacy-preserving alternative,[4] and requests location permission for Wi-Fi functionality due to an iOS platform restriction that Canon does not explain to users.[5]

Incidents

This is a list of all consumer-protection incidents related to this product. Any incidents not mentioned here can be found in the Canon Camera Connect category.

Online account requirement

The application requiring sign-in with Canon ID.

Camera Connect v3.4.0, released in April 2025, requires a Canon ID sign-in to use any of the app's features.[1][6] Image transfer and remote shutter control operate over a direct Wi-Fi connection between the camera and phone; no data is sent to Canon's servers for these functions.[7] The mandatory login blocks these local features until the user creates and signs into a Canon ID, which requires an internet connection.

The warning displayed to users, as of January 2025.

In early 2025, the Camera Connect app began to warn users that it would require an online account (Canon ID) in the first half of 2025.[8] The alert read:

An important update New features are coming to Camera Connect in the first half of 2025, such as quick and easy product registration, tailored notifications about news, offers, firmware updates and more. To be able to use the new version of the app you will need a Canon ID, if you don't have one, create one and be ready for these updates.

Canon's stated justification is that a unified login allows for "quick and easy product registration" and "tailored notifications about firmware, software updates, equipment notifications, new product announcements."[6] Canon did not address why cloud authentication is required for local Bluetooth and Wi-Fi transfers that involve no server interaction.

Data collection

The use of Canon ID is governed by Terms of Use[9] and a Privacy Policy.[10] The Privacy Policy authorizes Canon and third parties to collect and process user information including:

  • Personally identifiable information, including "your name, email address, telephone number, date of birth or home address" (clause 2.1.1) and "personal and family relationship information that you may provide on a voluntary basis, such as Email address to which your photos are shared on our Photo Sharing Services" (clause 2.1.2);
  • Device and activity information, including "details of your actions (repeated site visits, interactions, keywords, online content production, etc.) when you access and use our Services so that we can build a customer 'picture' over time" and "information about the devices and methods you use to interact with Canon Services and content" (clause 2.2.1);
  • Product usage, including "information about your Canon products (such as product model, serial number and purchase date), of how you set up and use your Canon products [...] and our Services, as well as details on your Customer Service, Warranty and Repairs interactions with Canon" (clause 2.2.2);
  • User files, including "images that you upload to Canon Services or you download from a linked third-party storage service to our Services, and their relevant descriptions and metadata, some of which may include personal information" (clause 2.3.1);
  • Location information (clause 2.6);
  • Purchase history (clause 2.7).

Canon reserves the right to share the user's personal information with third parties for various purposes (clause 4), including:

  • Service providers which carry out marketing campaigns or run customer surveys;
  • Payment processing companies, credit reference agencies and anti-fraud screening service providers;
  • Potential buyers in the event Canon sells any business assets;
  • Police and regulatory authorities.

Consumer reaction

The mandatory login requirement produced backlash among photographers who reported being unable to use the app in the field because they lacked cell signal to authenticate. One user described hauling camera gear to a mountain summit and discovering the app would not function without signing in.[11] Another user who had used the app for seven years wrote that they were "very upset that an application I've used [...] for the past seven years [...] now suddenly won't let me transfer photos off of my camera when I'm traveling."[12]

On DPReview, users described the Canon ID requirement as "a data-harvesting vector" and warned it could be "another baby step towards having to be logged in to use your camera."[13] Photographer Neil Turner characterized the change as "enshittification" and said he may file a complaint with the UK Information Commissioner's Office, arguing the requirement "goes against the spirit" of the GDPR's data minimization principle because "people [should not have] to surrender their personal data, just to use an app that works locally between their devices."[7]

A UK user raised the question of whether the mandatory login made the product "not as described" under the UK Consumer Rights Act 2015, noting that core features had been retroactively restricted behind an account wall that did not exist at the time of purchase.[14]

By comparison, Sony's Creators' App allows users to transfer images and shoot remotely without signing in. Sony only requires an account for cloud upload features.[15]

Full access to photo library (iOS)

The error message requesting full access to the photo library.

Canon Camera Connect for iOS requires Full Access to the user's photo library in order to transfer images from the camera. If a user grants Limited Access or Add Photos Only, the app displays an error and refuses to transfer photos.[4]

iOS provides an "Add Photos Only" permission level, which allows apps to save images to the user's photo library without being able to read or browse existing photos.[16] This permission is sufficient for an app that only needs to save incoming camera images. Other camera apps, including GoPro Quik, function with limited access.[4]

Previous versions of Canon Camera Connect worked without requiring full photo library access. Users on Canon's community forum confirmed that "the app can save photos with limited access" and that "it had been doing it just fine up until the last update."[4] A mobile developer on Reddit questioned Canon's implementation, writing: "I'm not sure why the app requires full access just to add photos. As a mobile developer, this seems unusual."[17]

A Canon Community forum member dismissed the concern, stating: "This is a simple permissions request. Canon is not going to look at your images."[4]

Location permission (iOS)

Canon Camera Connect requesting location permission to display the Wi-Fi network name.

Canon Camera Connect for iOS requests location permission in order to display the name of the Wi-Fi network (SSID) when connecting to a camera. The app displays the message: "Location information required to display the name of the network to which this smartphone is connected when connecting to the camera via Wi-Fi."[5]

This request is rooted in an Apple policy change introduced in iOS 13 (2019). Before iOS 13, apps could freely read the connected Wi-Fi network's SSID. Apple restricted this access because Wi-Fi network names and MAC addresses can be cross-referenced with location databases to determine a user's physical position. Apple bound SSID access to the CoreLocation framework, meaning any app that needs to read the Wi-Fi network name must request location permission.[18] An Apple engineer confirmed the reasoning: "The primary privacy concern was specifically about how SSIDs can be used to track location."[19]

Canon's in-app message describes the technical requirement accurately but does not explain the underlying Apple policy reason. Users have reported this location request since at least 2021,[20] with some users on Canon's community forum calling it "nonsense" and describing it as a refusal to function without location data.[5] User reports are inconsistent: some users with newer camera models report the app works with location permission disabled, while others (particularly those with older cameras like the Canon 6D) cannot bypass the requirement.[5]

See also


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Canon Camera Connect 3.4.0.8 APK". APKMirror. 1 Apr 2025. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  2. "Canon EOS Rebel T6i review". CNET. 29 Oct 2015. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  3. "Camera Connect". Canon U.S.A. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 "Cannon app wants full access to photo on iphone to be able to import pictures". Canon Community. 7 Jun 2024. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "recent Canon Connect iOS app refuses to operate without location information". Canon Community. 29 Aug 2023. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Camera Connect now requires Canon ID login". Canon. Archived from the original on 11 Apr 2025. Retrieved 11 Apr 2025.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Turner, Neil (26 Nov 2024). "The coming enshittification of Canon Camera Connect". Neil Turner's Blog. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  8. "Digital camera software will require login with Canon ID". Canon. Archived from the original on 9 Jan 2025. Retrieved 9 Jan 2025.
  9. "Terms of use". Canon. Archived from the original on 6 Apr 2025. Retrieved 11 Apr 2025.
  10. "Privacy policy". Canon. Archived from the original on 6 Apr 2025. Retrieved 11 Apr 2025.
  11. "Canon Connect App - signin required". Canon Community. 25 Sep 2025. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  12. "Camera Connect requires login". Reddit. 24 Apr 2025. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  13. "Canon ID is coming". DPReview Forums. 15 Dec 2024. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  14. "Frustrated by Camera Connect App Login; Any UK Consumers Challenged This Under UK Consumer Law?". Canon Community. 23 May 2025. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  15. "Creators' App support". Sony. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  16. "iOS 17: How to Control Which Apps Have Access to Your Photos". MacRumors. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  17. "Camera Connect app requesting full access to photo library". Reddit. 18 Nov 2024. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  18. "Why does the app need location permission to access Wi-Fi SSID?". Petoneer Blog. 3 Nov 2023. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  19. "Requirement of location services to get SSID name". Apple Developer Forums. 14 Aug 2024. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.
  20. "Canon Camera Connect wants location?". DPReview Forums. 19 Jul 2021. Retrieved 26 Mar 2026.