When the photo says more
than you meant to say.
Photo and video metadata bites people in five recognizable situations: vlogs that encode the path you walked, social posts whose platforms don't always strip what they claim to, messages that deliver the file as-is, listings that point to the room you sleep in, and dating-app photos whose originals live on in iCloud forever. Each page below is the same tool — framed for the situation you're in.
TikTok · Reels · Shorts · YouTube
Vlogging & reels
Modern iPhones tag every vlog frame with GPS. A 60-second walking vlog encodes the route you walked.
Instagram · Facebook · Reddit · X
Posts & stories
Most platforms strip some metadata, sometimes — never all of it, never reliably. The original still reaches their servers.
Strict delivery pipes
iMessage, WhatsApp, email
Most messaging apps deliver the attachment as-is. The picture, plus every hidden field, arrives in the recipient's hands.
Marketplace · Craigslist · Vinted
Selling online
Every listing photo carries the GPS of the room it was taken in — accurate to a few meters. A sofa shot points to your living room.
Tinder · Hinge · Bumble
Dating-app profiles
Apps strip on upload. The original on your camera roll still carries everything — and the camera serial is identical across all five photos.
Try the cleaner
on a single file.
One drop. See what's there. Download the clean version. Files never leave your browser.