Metadata on smart-phones
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- Expatriate
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Metadata on smart-phones
Metadata on smart-phones
Some of you are fully aware of this, some may have forgotten it and some are completely unaware that smart-phones hide information (metadata) on pictures taken which such devices.
The following information is regularly stored on pictures:
the location (latitude and longitude coordinates) where the photo was taken, assuming you took the photo with a GPS-enabled device, such as a smartphone.
Camera settings, such as ISO speed, shutter speed, focal length, aperture, white balance, lens type, and more.
The camera’s make and model.
The date and time the photo was taken.
The name of the program you used to edit the photo.
Cameras — both standalone digital cameras and smartphone cameras — add this metadata to the photo when they create it. Software programs may also update the metadata later, noting what software was used to edit the photo.
This adds up to a lot of information. If you’re sharing your photos online, you may want to get rid of this data. For example, if you take a photo in your house and then post it online, people may be able to read the photo’s EXIF metadata and determine where you live.
If you’re using a smartphone camera and don’t want your photos tagged with their GPS coordinates, open your Camera app and dig through its settings until you find the Location option. This will be in a different place on different smartphones. (I personally would never trust this option.......smartphones are spyware. Period.) Smart-phones also create other data than the ones mentioned above. There’s generally no way to prevent other EXIF metadata from being created by a smartphone camera.
You can remove metadata with Windows, but the tool built into Windows unfortunately just isn’t good enough for many purposes. For example, it can’t wipe out certain types of EXIF metadata and appears to fail on some images containing GPS metadata — exactly the thing most people would prefer to erase.
Therefore: use a third-party tool for removing metadata. Many of them are for free.
Some of you are fully aware of this, some may have forgotten it and some are completely unaware that smart-phones hide information (metadata) on pictures taken which such devices.
The following information is regularly stored on pictures:
the location (latitude and longitude coordinates) where the photo was taken, assuming you took the photo with a GPS-enabled device, such as a smartphone.
Camera settings, such as ISO speed, shutter speed, focal length, aperture, white balance, lens type, and more.
The camera’s make and model.
The date and time the photo was taken.
The name of the program you used to edit the photo.
Cameras — both standalone digital cameras and smartphone cameras — add this metadata to the photo when they create it. Software programs may also update the metadata later, noting what software was used to edit the photo.
This adds up to a lot of information. If you’re sharing your photos online, you may want to get rid of this data. For example, if you take a photo in your house and then post it online, people may be able to read the photo’s EXIF metadata and determine where you live.
If you’re using a smartphone camera and don’t want your photos tagged with their GPS coordinates, open your Camera app and dig through its settings until you find the Location option. This will be in a different place on different smartphones. (I personally would never trust this option.......smartphones are spyware. Period.) Smart-phones also create other data than the ones mentioned above. There’s generally no way to prevent other EXIF metadata from being created by a smartphone camera.
You can remove metadata with Windows, but the tool built into Windows unfortunately just isn’t good enough for many purposes. For example, it can’t wipe out certain types of EXIF metadata and appears to fail on some images containing GPS metadata — exactly the thing most people would prefer to erase.
Therefore: use a third-party tool for removing metadata. Many of them are for free.
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- The Dark Horse
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Re: Metadata on smart-phones
Of course you are right but it also sounds very :
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- Expatriate
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Re: Metadata on smart-phones
It does ?
- frank lee bent
- Expatriate
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Re: Metadata on smart-phones
you can strip it with photoshop
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- Expatriate
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mon May 04, 2015 9:42 pm
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- Location: Timbuktu
Re: Metadata on smart-phones
Given the wealth of information collected by :
- your smarphone OS
- your service provider especially when using internet
- The different app you use
Worrying about the picture metadata is kind of low priority
If you worry about this it means that you take picture with your phone and post them on such privacy concerned service as Facebook, twitter and such, meaning you do not really value your privacy to start with.
- your smarphone OS
- your service provider especially when using internet
- The different app you use
Worrying about the picture metadata is kind of low priority
If you worry about this it means that you take picture with your phone and post them on such privacy concerned service as Facebook, twitter and such, meaning you do not really value your privacy to start with.
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