Privacy & metadata
Strip EXIF and GPS data, and edit files without uploading them — privacy you can actually verify.
Every photo your phone or camera takes carries a hidden second file bolted onto the image: EXIF metadata. Some of it is harmless (which camera, what shutter speed), and some of it is not — the GPS coordinates of where the picture was taken, the exact timestamp, sometimes a device serial number. Post that photo unedited and you may be publishing your home address without meaning to. This cluster is about seeing that data and deciding what leaves your hands.
The through-line is that privacy you cannot verify is not privacy. A tool that promises to "strip your metadata" but uploads the photo to its server to do it has already handled your original file and its location data. EditItAll takes the opposite approach: the image tools, the photo editor and every converter run on your device, so the file — and the coordinates inside it — never travel anywhere. You can load a page, disconnect from the internet, and the tools still work, which is the clearest proof that nothing is being sent.
The guides here get concrete: how to remove EXIF and GPS data from a photo before you share it, how to edit or convert an image without uploading it anywhere, and how to think about which files carry sensitive metadata in the first place. The goal is a workflow you can trust because you can check it, not because a privacy policy asked you to.