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Direct How to protect the privacy of photos on the Internet + Software

Uncle Mac

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When you create a photo with a mobile phone, a camera, a professional camera ... in addition to the pixels you see, additional information is included in the image. What information is entered depends on the device itself, but also on the settings. All this allows a standard called "Exchangeable image file format" - EXIF.

The most commonly entered information about the time of creating a photo (date and time), the size of the pixel image (XY), the camera manufacturer (eg Sony, Nikon, Canon ... etc.), and the camera model, F-number, exposure time , whether flash, ISO, and the like are used. As i mentioned, it all depends on the device itself and its settings. So, say, GoPro cameras will write more data, as well as Sony, and Canon, Samsung cameras in phones maybe less, and so on.

But what you have probably encountered is typing a location into an image, i.e. GPS coordinates. When you launch a phone application for the first time, you may be asked whether you want to save the location. If you confirm, then the exact location of your photo from the GPS coordinates will be entered into the image.


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And in the end, you have a bunch of additional information included in the image that can be used. For example, you can see the correct camera settings and copy them and make a similar photo. Adding a location can be helpful if you are making a travel album, so you can remember from where you've taken the picture from.

As far as this sounds great, keep in mind that all of the information will remain in your picture and when you share it somewhere. Some sites delete this information when sending, but some do not. So someone can see exactly where you were when you took a particular picture and which device / phone you used, although you might not want to. For example, on one site with the sale of used vehicles, i saw that the salesman hid his location and blurred the charts, but i found the GPS coordinates of the image and so he found out where it is from.

Therefore, there are tools for deleting this data and therefore i highly recommend one called EXIF Purge, and i chose this tool because it is very lightweight, easy to use, portable and available for Windows and Mac.

Instructions

1) Download, unpack, and run EXIF Purge
2) When the main window appears, click on "Select images"
3) You will now see all the selected images on the list

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4) In the Section "Output Location" section, click "Select"
5) Select a folder on the computer where the processed images will be stored

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6) Click "Purge EXIF Info"
7) The program will make copies of images in the destination folder and remove EXIF data

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If there are green markers next to the pictures on the list, then it's all right! You will now have original images and copies of images in the selected folder without EXIF information.

You can see the result in the picture below:

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After the finished image processing, a commercial will appear that you can close after 5 seconds. The advertisement is not attacking, only the developer advertises other products, which is acceptable.



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