Metapho is an iOS photo utility for accessing, editing, and removing photo metadata. Whether you want to share a photo without the metadata associated with it for privacy reasons, make edits to that ...
Metadata from Kate Middleton’s suspicious Mother’s Day photo confirms it was edited at least twice before being published — the first bit of verifiable truth about the infamous snap since the Princess ...
The British Royal family's photo-editing story has provided a reminder about the digital breadcrumbs we all leave behind. Ian Sherr Contributor and Former Editor at Large / News Ian Sherr (he/him/his) ...
Photographers turning to social networks like Facebook and Twitter to promote their work may be losing the legal rights to their photos because the sites are deleting the images’ metadata. Those sites ...
A bit of bad news about Vista if you’re a photographer. Apparently if you tag a photo’s metadata in Vista, it destroys other important metadata used by image editing apps such as Photoshop.
Apple’s iOS apps often serve as a foundation of ideas and technologies that third-party developers can build upon to create new and more advanced functionalities – this has been the case for years ...
Sign up for The Media Today, CJR’s daily newsletter. Just about everyone has heard by now the cautionary tale of Vice Magazine’s accidental outing of a source’s ...
A new update to the free metadata photo and video app Metapho for iPhone has brought what looks like the first way to tell when your iPhone 11 shots were taken with Deep Fusion (at least for now).
Organizer makes it easy to adjust date, time, or location data on one or more photos from the iPhone. iCloud Photo Library answered my mobile photo prayers—until I realized there was no way to adjust ...
A photographer has won a lawsuit filed against Facebook in Germany. The suit claimed that Facebook’s practice of removing EXIF metadata from photos uploaded to the service violated German copyright ...
When migrating recently from a Windows XP computer to a Mac, my digital photos moved over easily. The metadata describing who was in those photos didn’t. Here’s why — and a few things you might want ...