From your comments I understand you currently have an image library in Picasa, with photos which might become duplicated in the future (due to re-downloading). To ease the deduplication process you want to have a "static" hash for each photo, even when you update the metadata of the photo.
You're looking to move away from Picasa to a cross-platform solution, which digiKamoffers.
Below information is pieced together from the internet, I haven't tried anything, but from the descriptions it seems it will do what you want. Make a backup before trying anything.
Getting face tags from Picasa to digiKam
When you do a websearch for "digikam face tag import" you'll find a few methods that relate to Picasa:
- This gist exports the face tags from Picasa to the digiKam database directly, without touching any photos.
- picasa2digikam which is "A script to migrate Picasa metadata from its
.picasa.ini
files and/or contacts.xml
file to the digiKam database."
Using any of the two methods above you should be able to get the face tagging out of Picasa and into digiKam.
Writing metadata, but without changing the photo file
Now you have a digiKam database that indicates the face tagging information for all your photos. From your comment it seems you don't want to be tied to any software, so you probably want to look into XMP sidecar files.
Those files live next to the photo files and hold the metadata, such as the face tags. digiKam has support for writing metadata to sidecar files:
In digiKam’s main window go to Settings -> Configure digiKam and select the tab Metadata
There are four options available:
- Write to image only — This option will not use XMP but will write all the metadata directly into the images.
- Write to XMP sidecar only — No metadata will be written to any images directly but it will write all metadata into a separate XMP file in the same directory as the image.
- Write to image and XMP sidecar – metadata will be written to both XMP and Image.
- Write to XMP sidecar for Read-only images only — which means that images which have read, write and execute permissions metadata will be written directly to the image whereas for Read–only images XMP sidecar will be used.
To be safe you could make all your photos read only, and then choose option 4 (or simply choose option 2).
Now you should have all your images in a folder, where each image has a corresponding .xmp
file with the face tagging information. I think this is as "universal" as it gets.