I can scribble out identifying info (text, landmarks, faces) in an image, but I’ve heard images can have some geographic data. How do I remove that?

And video is a whole separate challenge - I don’t know how to edit video. Does video have other metadata like my location or stuff about my device? What’s some software good for beginners? How do you remove excess metadata with it?

Are there other considerations I should have?

(If there are step-by-step resources out there, please feel free to just link me to them.)

Thanks in advance!

  • @MehBlah
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    226 months ago

    OP should be aware removing this data will often require you to change the orientation of the image. Its one of the problems with using exif data to store the orientation rather allowing the image to be seen the way its really stored. I made one of my daughters high school teachers furious when I pointed out why the images the kids were uploading were being saved ‘sidewase’ to use the teachers description. When she assured me the software vendor assured them it wasn’t anything they were doing and I showed her on the sites support pages where they addressed the issue. I also explained to my daughter the correct way to take the pictures with her phone so they looked the same after the exif data was removed. She told the rest of the kids and the problem largely went away.

    • @grue
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      136 months ago

      You could always selectively remove the sensitive exif info while leaving the orientation intact, though. It just takes being slightly more competent at using the tool.

      • @MehBlah
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        46 months ago

        In this case it was a bunch of high school kids uploading their work in the form of an image to a… I wont say low effort but definitely low support pre-google learning website. I remember the python tool they were using just stripped all exif data and to be truthful don’t know it it had options to leave some of it intact. The real factor here is if the phone manufacturers, apple being one of them had bothered to fix the orientation of a image to its actual orientation and used the viewing software to orient it to the screen it wouldn’t have been a problem. Instead they used the exif data which guaranteed when the image was processed in any way that altered that exif data it would come out wrong unless it happened to have been taken in the correct orientation with the camera itself. Which wasn’t the natural orientation when taking a picture with a smart phone.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Honestly, it’s nice to hear that the developer considered the exif data and scrubbed it… even if they did it poorly.

          People on the internet can be really creepy.

          A person on the internet