16
|
1 <!DOCTYPE html>
|
|
2 <html>
|
|
3 <head>
|
|
4 <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
|
|
5 <title>Introducing ExifWasher</title>
|
|
6 <style>
|
|
7 html { font-family: "TeX Gyre Schola", serif; }
|
|
8 h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 { font-family: "Avenir Next", sans-serif; }
|
|
9 pre, code, kbd, samp { font-family: "Menlo", monospace; font-size: 85%; }
|
|
10 </style>
|
|
11 </head>
|
|
12 <body>
|
|
13 <h1>Indroducing ExifWasher</h1>
|
|
14 <h2>Executive Summary</h2>
|
|
15 <p>This program makes it easy to remove metadata from the digital images you
|
|
16 create.</p>
|
|
17 <h2>What is “Metadata” and Why Would I Want to Remove It?</h2>
|
|
18 <p>You may not realize it, but image files can (and typically do!) contain
|
|
19 more than just image data. These data can include your camera make, model,
|
|
20 and serial number; the location where you took the photo; the software you
|
|
21 used to edit the photo (and what editing steps you did); etc.</p>
|
|
22 <p>One of the most powerful uses of photography is to graphically document
|
|
23 things that the wealthy and powerful might wish to remain concealed. The
|
|
24 evils of slavery, child labor, poverty, war, and imperialism have all been
|
|
25 documented photographically, and such photographs have often proved
|
|
26 instrumental in helping to motivate social change.</p>
|
|
27 <p>Because of the metadata they contain, digital photographs contain data
|
|
28 which has been used to determine who took them, and in some cases to exact
|
|
29 retribution against their photographers. ExifWasher makes it easy to see
|
|
30 and remove the privacy-compromising metadata in your images.</p>
|
|
31 <p>Even if your images are not of such a sensitive nature, that extra data
|
|
32 takes up space. It is not uncommon for a 100 KiB image to contain 20 KiB
|
|
33 of metadata in it; if that image is on a web page, that makes for 20 KiB
|
|
34 of wasted network usage each time the image is sent.</p>
|
|
35 <h2>What Makes ExifWasher Different from Other Metadata Editors?</h2>
|
|
36 <p>Simply put, it is designed to <em>safely</em> remove <em>unimportant</em>
|
|
37 metadata.</p>
|
|
38 <p>There are plenty of general-purpose image metadata editors out there, and
|
|
39 these tools can be employed to remove unimportant metadata. The trouble
|
|
40 is, they are not user-friendly: it is up to you, the user, to know which
|
|
41 metadata are unimportant, and to delete it.</p>
|
|
42 <p>There can be literally <em>hundreds</em> of bits of metadata in an
|
|
43 image, and <em>not all are safe to remove</em>. In particular, if you
|
|
44 accidentally remove color-management metadata, computers that don’t handle
|
|
45 images without color-management metadata properly (I’m talking about <em>you</em>,
|
|
46 Apple Computer, Inc.) will display colors that often look all “washed-out”
|
|
47 or otherwise incorrect.</p>
|
|
48 <p>Likewise, there are already plenty of simple-to-use, user-friendly tools
|
|
49 out there for cleaning the metadata out of image files, but they
|
|
50 inevitably delete <em>all</em> metadata, resulting in files that often
|
|
51 display improperly. Also of concern, many of these “tools” are actually
|
|
52 online services. If you’re concerned about your privacy, why would you
|
|
53 trust the images you’re processing to some unknown third party, who may be
|
|
54 linked somehow to those who might want to retaliate against you.</p>
|
|
55 <p>I wrote this program because I wanted there to be a quick, easy way to
|
|
56 scrub images before they even left a photographer’s computer and made
|
|
57 their way onto the Internet, and for that program to leave vital metadata
|
|
58 alone, so that the resulting images continue to display properly.</p>
|
|
59 <h2>ExifWasher Washes More than Just Exif Metadata</h2>
|
|
60 <p>Exif is the most common type of metadata, but image files commonly
|
|
61 contain compromising XMP or IPTC data, particularly if they have been
|
|
62 edited with a tool like Photoshop. ExifWasher will seamlessly deal with
|
|
63 these kinds of metadata, too. It tries to do as thorough a job as possible
|
|
64 of scrubbing possibly compromising metadata from your images.</p>
|
|
65 <h2>Using ExifWasher</h2>
|
|
66 <p>Just double-click on the ExifWasher icon and a main window should open
|
|
67 up. Either choose the File… Wash from the menu bar, or just drag image
|
|
68 files onto the main ExifWasher image.</p>
|
|
69 <p>When ExifWasher opens an image, it displays all the metadata it finds.
|
|
70 That metadata will be run through an internal whitelist, and any data
|
|
71 whose “key” is not found on the whitelist will be automatically selected
|
|
72 for deletion.</p>
|
|
73 <p>If you disagree with ExifWasher’s decisions, you can check or uncheck the
|
|
74 boxes next to the metadata in question. When you are satisfied with the
|
|
75 choice of metadata to be scrubbed, click “Wash” and all offending metadata
|
|
76 will be removed. A dialog will pop up showing the metadata remaining in
|
|
77 the new, washed file.</p>
|
|
78 <h2>Output Files</h2>
|
|
79 <p>ExifWasher never modifies an existing image file. Instead, it creates a
|
|
80 new file of the same type but with “_washed” appended to its name. For
|
|
81 example, processing <code>foo.jpg</code> will create <code>foo_washed.jpg</code>.
|
|
82 By default, the new file will be created in the same directory as the file
|
|
83 being washed.</p>
|
|
84 <h2>ExifWasher is Configurable</h2>
|
|
85 <p>Both the whitelist and the destination directory for the washed files are
|
|
86 user-configurable in the Preferences menu.</p>
|
|
87 <h3>Configuring the Whitelist</h3>
|
|
88 <p>There are two kinds of whitelist entries: those that match an entire
|
|
89 metadata key, and those that match a key prefix. The latter end in an
|
|
90 asterisk. The whitelist is case-sensitive; i.e. the entry <code>exif.image.colormap</code>
|
|
91 <em>will not</em> match the <code>Exif.Image.ColorMap</code> key.</p>
|
|
92 </body>
|
|
93 </html>
|