View Full Version : Clear EXIF Data?
Persian-Rice
11th of February 2005 (Fri), 22:40
Just a quick question. I am submitting a CD to one of my clients(for print only), should I clear the EXIF data out or let it stay?
Conk
11th of February 2005 (Fri), 23:32
Just a quick question. I am submitting a CD to one of my clients(for print only), should I clear the EXIF data out or let it stay?
Personally I clear it. That is my proof I own the ©.
Persian-Rice
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 06:21
Good Idea, thanks.
JX
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 08:26
Persian-Rice and Conk,
This is a very good question "Clear EXIF Data?”
Why would you want to clear EXIF DATA? I would think that EXIF data would further support a claim that you have copyrights to the image. I am asking because I have been doing the opposite. I change the copyright status to copyrighted, and in the copy right description “not to be published or reproduce without my permission”.
Please let me know what you think.
Thanks
Jim
PacAce
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 13:52
Persian-Rice and Conk,
This is a very good question "Clear EXIF Data?”
Why would you want to clear EXIF DATA? I would think that EXIF data would further support a claim that you have copyrights to the image. I am asking because I have been doing the opposite. I change the copyright status to copyrighted, and in the copy right description “not to be published or reproduce without my permission”.
Please let me know what you think.
Thanks
Jim
I could be wrong but I think they were referring to the camera stats in the EXIF such as aperture, shutter speed, etc.
Persian-Rice
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 15:02
Yes, I was refering to all the camera EXIF. Not the extra "Metadata" which is author and copyrights, I have those filled in.
It's a good way of keeping the only original copy to yourself. I have had 3 major clients and two wanted my work to be done in film, so I did it in film, but the latest guy wanted it on CD.
Scottes
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 18:28
What's to say that I can't fill in your empty EXIF data with my own values and claim the picture as my own? That's a fairly trivial task. Now where's the proof?
I'd think that to claim the image as your own you'd have to keep the RAW and give the client anything but a RAW. Then you'd have a leg to stand on.
JX
12th of February 2005 (Sat), 20:08
Thanks Persian-Rice, I was curious.
Conk
13th of February 2005 (Sun), 12:10
What's to say that I can't fill in your empty EXIF data with my own values and claim the picture as my own? That's a fairly trivial task. Now where's the proof?
I'd think that to claim the image as your own you'd have to keep the RAW and give the client anything but a RAW. Then you'd have a leg to stand on.
Great point. Can the exif data be changed in photoshop? Which program?
Scottes
14th of February 2005 (Mon), 12:01
It doesn't look like PS can, but there's a ton of programs that can do so. I use ExifUtils which is a command line thing - it would be trivial to write a quick program to copy one images EXIF data to another.
A Google for "edit exif" should yield about 304,000 hits.
PS: I haven't forgotten about the other thing, I've just been too busy. Works stinks.
Conk
15th of February 2005 (Tue), 00:24
What other thing?
Illegally_Alive
15th of February 2005 (Tue), 01:16
Conk- Didn't you get the memo? ....eep, I've said too much already...
Scottes
15th of February 2005 (Tue), 04:04
Sorry. Over-worked brain got confused. Never mind.
tonychien
17th of February 2005 (Thu), 17:23
To re-save a image in Photoshop will recompress your JPEG image file. It will loss more image detail and decrease image quality.
You could try DigitalFilm 1.65, it offers a EXIF editor tool which move the EXIF data from image without damage image.
http://www.opanda.com/en/df/
Another tool, Opanda PowerExif Editor Pro allow to remove Exif data from image files as a batch.
http://www.opanda.com/en/pe/
hijinks
4th of February 2007 (Sun), 16:18
Persian-Rice and Conk,
This is a very good question "Clear EXIF Data?”
Why would you want to clear EXIF DATA? I would think that EXIF data would further support a claim that you have copyrights to the image. I am asking because I have been doing the opposite. I change the copyright status to copyrighted, and in the copy right description “not to be published or reproduce without my permission”.
Please let me know what you think.
Thanks
Jim
I think what he is saying is that he will have the origional file with all of the data in it. I would register the image before giving them the file.
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