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Strip metadata from images for privacy. Free, private, runs in your browser.
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EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is metadata embedded in photographs by cameras and smartphones. It can include GPS coordinates, camera make and model, lens settings, date and time, altitude, and even the serial number of the device. While useful for organizing your own photo library, EXIF data can reveal sensitive personal information when you share photos online.
Sharing photos with EXIF data intact can expose your exact location, daily routines, and equipment. This is a privacy and safety concern, especially for photos posted on social media, forums, or dating profiles. Many journalists, activists, and privacy-conscious users strip EXIF data before sharing any image. Some platforms auto-strip EXIF, but many do not.
Convertful re-encodes your JPG image without the EXIF metadata segment. The pixel data remains untouched — only the metadata is removed. The process runs entirely in your browser; your photos are never uploaded or transmitted. The output is a clean JPG with no embedded metadata.
Extremely safe. This tool is specifically designed to protect your privacy, and it practices what it preaches — all processing is local. Your images never leave your browser.
EXIF data is metadata embedded in photos — GPS location, camera model, date taken, and more. Removing it protects your privacy when sharing photos online.
No. The image pixels are untouched. Only the metadata is removed.