Billion Hearts launches PicSee, world’s first AI-powered mutual photo-sharing app
Billion Hearts launches PicSee, the world’s first AI-powered mutual photo-sharing app, introducing a “Give to Get” concept. Users receive unseen photos taken by friends automatically, while privacy-first encryption ensures photos remain on-device, unseen by anyone else.
Updated On - 17 October 2025, 03:14 PM
Hyderabad: Billion Hearts Software Technologies, founded by serial entrepreneur Mayank Bidawatka (co-founder of Koo), has announced the launch of PicSee, the world’s first AI-powered mutual photo-sharing app.
PicSee introduces a revolutionary concept in photo sharing — “Give to Get.” Friends must share your photos to receive theirs. Once both parties approve each other, photos are mutually shared automatically, eliminating the need for manual follow-ups. This simple, mutual-sharing workflow is a world-first, making photo sharing effortless, fair, and fun.
Trillions of photos are captured every year but remain unshared, locked away on friends’ devices. PicSee changes this permanently: using an AI-powered “give me mine to get yours” system, it delivers photos of you taken by friends, without awkward reminders or manual effort.
Built with a privacy-first architecture, PicSee employs end-to-end encryption, ensuring that photos remain on users’ devices. Only you and your friends can view photos and comments — not even PicSee can access them.
Following a private soft launch in July, PicSee now spans 27 countries and 160+ cities. The app has grown 75x in just two months, driven entirely by users inviting friends. Over 150,000 photos have already been exchanged, and notably, 30% of users now have more photos of themselves on PicSee than in their own camera galleries.
Mayank Bidawatka, founder of PicSee, said: “There are over 15 trillion photos in the world, with 2 trillion more clicked every year — yet most never get shared. People lack the incentive to share, so memories remain buried on friends’ phones. PicSee fixes this beautifully with its patent-pending mutual sharing flow: you receive unseen photos from friends, and to get theirs, they must share yours. It’s the world’s first photo-sharing app built on fair mutual exchange.”
He added: “Unlike traditional apps, PicSee removes all manual effort. It uses privacy-safe AI to automatically locate photos your friends have taken of you. Everything stays encrypted and on-device — even PicSee cannot see your photos. It’s simple, private, and built for global scale.”
“PicSee is one of the few real-world consumer AI products built for billions. Everyone is a photographer, yet everyone misses thousands of photos taken by friends. Photos are proof of the moments we lived and loved — and PicSee brings them back effortlessly,” Bidawatka said.