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FORUMS Post Processing, Marketing & Presenting Photos RAW, Post Processing & Printing 
Thread started 31 Aug 2008 (Sunday) 10:28
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elitejp
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Aug 31, 2008 10:28 |  #1

I came across this over at the Nikon site talking about fake dslr. The poster made a statement about using this program. In essence he said that you could take a picture with the camera, download it onto the computer, and then check the exif info. The info would tell you what camera it really was and also how many pictures were actually taken witht he camera. That second part seems to be pretty interesting, especially if buying a second hand camera. Does anyone have any experience with this?


6D; canon 85mm 1.8, Tamron 24-70mm VC, Canon 135L Canon 70-200L is ii

  
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eddarr
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Aug 31, 2008 11:28 |  #2

Opanda will allow you to view the exif info for an image. However it only works if the person who processed the image left the exif embedded in the image. It will tell you the image name but not the image count for a camera. If the camera owner never reset the file naming sequence or went over 9999 clicks or created a new folder it might work...not likely though.

You can download it here http://www.opanda.com/​en/iexif/ (external link)


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Sep 01, 2008 07:55 |  #3

elitejp wrote in post #6213758 (external link)
...and also how many pictures were actually taken witht he camera.

As far as I know (have read), with certain Canon dslr models, there is no piece of software the consumer can use to determine the click count. Only Canon service can do that.


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