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author | Christian Cleberg <hello@cleberg.net> | 2024-03-04 22:34:28 -0600 |
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committer | Christian Cleberg <hello@cleberg.net> | 2024-03-04 22:34:28 -0600 |
commit | 797a1404213173791a5f4126a77ad383ceb00064 (patch) | |
tree | fcbb56dc023c1e490df70478e696041c566e58b4 /blog/exiftool | |
parent | 3db79e7bb6a34ee94935c22d7f0e18cf227c7813 (diff) | |
download | cleberg.net-797a1404213173791a5f4126a77ad383ceb00064.tar.gz cleberg.net-797a1404213173791a5f4126a77ad383ceb00064.tar.bz2 cleberg.net-797a1404213173791a5f4126a77ad383ceb00064.zip |
initial migration to test org-mode
Diffstat (limited to 'blog/exiftool')
-rw-r--r-- | blog/exiftool/index.org | 60 |
1 files changed, 60 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/blog/exiftool/index.org b/blog/exiftool/index.org new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5735125 --- /dev/null +++ b/blog/exiftool/index.org @@ -0,0 +1,60 @@ +#+title: Stripping Image Metadata with exiftool +#+date: 2022-02-17 +#+description: A simple guide to remove exif data with exiftool. +#+filetags: :privacy: + +** Why Strip Metadata? +Okay, so you want to strip metadata from your photos. Perhaps you take +pictures of very rare birds, and the location metadata is a gold mine +for poachers, or perhaps you're just privacy-oriented like me and prefer +to strip metadata from publicly-available images. + +There are various components of image metadata that you may want to +delete before releasing a photo to the public. Here's an incomplete list +of things I could easily see just by inspecting a photo on my laptop: + +- Location (Latitude & Longitude) +- Dimensions +- Device Make & Model +- Color Space +- Color Profile +- Focal Length +- Alpha Channel +- Red Eye +- Metering Mode +- F Number + +Regardless of your reasoning, I'm going to explain how I used the +=exiftool= package in Linux to automatically strip metadata from all +images in a directory (+ subdirectories). + +** Installing =exiftool= +First things first: we need to install the tool. I'm running Debian 11 +on my server (Ubuntu will work the same), so the command is as simple +as: + +#+begin_src sh +sudo apt install exiftool +#+end_src + +There are different tools that can accomplish the same thing across +distributions, but I really only care to test out this one package. + +** Recursively Strip Data +I actually use this tool extensively to strip any photos uploaded to the +website that serves all the images for my blog (=img.cleberg.net=). + +The following command is incredibly useful and can be modified to +include any image extensions that =exiftool= supports: + +#+begin_src sh +exiftool -r -all= -ext jpg -ext png /path/to/directory/ +#+end_src + +See below for the results of my most recent usage of =exiftool= after I +uploaded the image for this blog post. You can see that the command will +let you know how many directories were scanned, how many images were +updated, and how many images were unchanged. + +#+caption: exiftool results +[[https://img.cleberg.net/blog/20220217-stripping-metadata-with-exiftool/exiftool.png]] |