A "Google photo" may refer to different things. First possibility: You are referring to Google Streetview. In Google Streetview, one can view (where available) 360 degrees panoramic pictures taken of a street at different positions in that street. The pictures were taken by 9 directional cameras, covering a view of 360 degrees, which are mounted on a car along with a GPS unit. If you are refering to Google images, these images were indexed by the Google crawlers.
To find out when a photo on Google Maps was taken, you can click on the image and look for the date listed at the bottom right corner of the photo. This date indicates when the image was captured. Additionally, if the photo is part of user-contributed content, you may see the date it was uploaded as well. For satellite images, the date may not be displayed directly, but you can often find it in the image details or by checking the "historical imagery" feature in Google Earth.
No everyone will have taken a panorama photo.
You can have your photo taken by a street photographer. Or you can have photos taken in Kandahar.
You can look google.
Go to google.com/profiles. There you will be asked for a photo.
Picasa, a photo management and sharing software, was acquired by Google in 2002. It became part of Google's suite of services and was integrated into various Google products, including Google Photos. Google announced the discontinuation of Picasa in 2016, encouraging users to transition to Google Photos for their photo management needs.
Christian's photo
with mouse
anywhere
You can get a passport photo taken at various locations such as post offices, drugstores, and photography studios.
When you view an image on Google Images, it has not actually been uploaded. All the images are taken from websites. So if you want your image to appear on a search, you need to have the image on a website with the relevant search tags.
You can get a visa photo taken at a local pharmacy, post office, or a professional photography studio that offers passport and visa photo services.