Anonymous No More: Be Careful Where You Send Those iPhone/Smartphone Pictures
Welcome to the world where everyone has a camera on them – their mobile phone. You use your phones camera to catch all sorts of moments in your life. When you hang out with your friends, when you are with your family, when you are putting less then savory pictures of yourself on the internet (?!). Hard to believe the last one is true!
Yup, we take these pictures – of any type – and share them. The only problem is, when you send that picture you are sending more then just a picture. You are also sending METADATA.
Now for the average computer user, you may not be aware what metadata is. Metadata is information the camera leaves on a picture such as camera model, shutter speed, resolution, time the picture was taken and for most smartphones with GPS, (especially the iPhone) the GPS coordinates of where the picture was taken.
GPS coordinates can be very useful to Geotag where you were at a specific moment. But lets say you take some less then savory pictures of yourself and post it on a personal website or email it to someone you didn’t want to know where you live. You are secretly emailing them your EXACT location without you knowing it.
Let me illustrate. Here is a picture of the Chrysler building I took with my iPhone in NYC.

Innocent looking picture, right? I just emailed it to myself from my phone and uploaded it to my website. Now if you download it to your computer it will reveal some hidden information.
Hidden in the JPEGS metadata is the GPS coordinates of where I took the picture. Which easily can get mapped to Google Maps.
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Now lets say that you post a picture of yourself to a website where you wish your location to be a secret, a person can simply download the JPEG taken from your smartphone and know exactly where you live.
Creepy, right? The only way to sort of wash this information is to run the image through an image editing program and change the image format – lets say to a GIF of PNG. Or find the location services option on your phone and shut it off.
Put on your tin foil hats people! Now, me being the most paranoid person out there I don’t have much to fear leaving my GPS on, but for people out there who are a little sketchy – you may want to turn that radio off.

“You are secretly emailing them your EXACT location without you knowing it.”
Not really. The Camera application, like any application that uses the iPhone location services API must, asks for your permission to include your location the first time it is launched. Location services can be toggled easily. I do agree though that everyone should exercise caution when sending GPS tagged photos to strangers.
@Jeremiah…. yea, but it is easy to forget you granted the camera that permission as well as forget the camera even records geocodes.
Very interesting. I guess no more anon “myspace angles” haha
Oh snap.. Is this why people keep showing up and knowing where I am all the time????
@Dan…in that middle picture…what program are using to view the GPS coordinates. Wonder if other phones with built in GPS do the same thing??
@Dan…forget it…I just found it…get even more information in PhotoshopCS4
I think you are thinking like sukrat, but I think you should cover the other side of the topic in the post too…
I am amazed with it. It is a good thing for my research. Thanks
I am unable to understand this post. But well some points are useful for me.