EXIF Data Privacy: What Your Photos Reveal
Understand what metadata your camera stores in photos and how to strip it before sharing for privacy protection.
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EXIF Photo Metadata Privacy
Every photo your smartphone or camera takes embeds metadata that can reveal your exact location, device model, the time it was taken, and even your name. Understanding this metadata helps you protect your privacy when sharing photos.
What EXIF Contains
Camera make and model, lens information, shutter speed, aperture, ISO, focal length, white balance, flash status. GPS coordinates (latitude, longitude, altitude) accurate to within a few meters. Date and time of capture. Thumbnail preview image. Software used for editing. Copyright information. On smartphones: device serial number and sometimes Wi-Fi network name.
Privacy Risks
GPS coordinates in shared photos can reveal your home address, workplace, children's school, and daily routine. This information has been used in stalking, burglary (knowing when you're away), and doxxing. Even photos taken indoors contain GPS data. Social media platforms like Twitter/X and Facebook strip GPS data on upload, but many other platforms (forums, messaging apps, cloud storage) do not.
Stripping EXIF Data
Browser-based tools process images locally, removing all metadata while preserving the image quality. Upload photos, select which metadata to strip (all, GPS only, or custom selection), and download the cleaned versions. The image pixels are untouched — only the metadata wrapper is modified.
Selective Metadata Preservation
Sometimes you want to keep camera settings (for photography portfolios) while removing GPS data. Most EXIF stripping tools offer selective removal. Preserve: camera model, exposure settings, lens info. Remove: GPS coordinates, date/time, thumbnails, device identifiers, editing software traces.
Prevention Settings
On iPhone: Settings → Privacy → Location Services → Camera → set to "Never." On Android: Camera app settings → Location/GPS tagging → Off. This prevents GPS data from being embedded in future photos. For photos already taken, you need to strip the metadata after the fact.
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