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Curaph is a cloud-based photo organization tool designed for individuals and small personal photo collections. Users can upload photos from any device, organize them into albums by event or date, group multiple albums into galleries, and share them with family or friends via private links. Its positioning is closer to a lightweight photo cloud drive and gallery delivery tool than a full-fledged enterprise digital asset management system.
The product centers on the workflow of “upload — organize — share — download originals.” Original photos are stored securely and without compression, so users can download the same full-resolution files they uploaded. Albums are sorted by year and presented in a clean timeline-style browsing experience. For sharing, Curaph supports unique links, allowing recipients to view and download photos without registering. This makes it suitable for family albums, event photo delivery, and sharing photography proofs. The permission model is fairly simple: photos are private by default, and only explicitly shared galleries or albums can be accessed. We did not find team workspaces, role-based permissions, approval flows, or multi-user collaboration management features.
Pricing is fairly transparent. The free plan costs $0/month and includes 1GB of storage, around 200 photos, all core features, and no credit card requirement. Premium costs $5/month and provides 10GB of storage, around 2,000 photos, and a maximum file size of 20MB per photo. Pro costs $10/month and provides 50GB of storage, around 10,000 photos, and priority support. The site also mentions upgrades of up to 100GB, but the pricing page only lists 50GB, so the storage information is slightly inconsistent. Storage limits and photo-count limits are enforced separately; reaching either limit first will restrict usage.
Curaph is a cloud service, with photos stored on AWS S3. Its terms state that users retain ownership of their content, while the platform receives only the limited license required to store and display it. Photos are private by default, and the service says it does not sell personal data. After account deletion, photos and data are permanently removed from its servers. However, the publicly available materials do not disclose encryption in transit or at rest, backup policies, SLA, compliance certifications, or any API, webhook, or third-party integration options.
Curaph’s strengths are its ease of use, low barrier to entry with a free plan, uncompressed original-photo storage, and convenient private-link sharing. It is well suited to families, photography enthusiasts, and small-scale event photo delivery. Its limitations include relatively modest storage capacity, a lack of team permissions, limited enterprise security disclosures, no ecosystem integrations, and no developer-facing capabilities. The terms also state that the service is provided “as is,” with no guarantee of uptime or data retention, so important photos should still be backed up separately.
The crawled text does not provide information on availability from mainland China, a Chinese-language interface, or local payment options, so access status should be considered unknown. If access or payment is limited, alternatives to consider include Google Photos, iCloud Photos, Flickr, SmugMug, or domestic options such as 百度网盘 and 阿里云盘.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on curaph.com official site.
curaph.com is an Unknown Cloud Drives provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach curaph.com directly.