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To: rivercat
I'd read about that. My son sent me a snapshot with a newer iPhone. I uploaded it to my web space so I could read the exif with my (then) Safari browser plugin (my version of Photoshop couldn't pick up the coordinates). Once I found the GPS coordinates, I ran them through a converter and got a street address. With that, I went to Mapquest and looked up the address. It was about a block from my son's house where the photo was taken.

I alerted him to what I'd found and that he should turn off the GPS. There are instructions somewhere how to do it, but I don't know if it disables what is stored in the phone's memory and if such stored information can be transferred to your computer.

The purpose might be benign, in part. You hear of people being lost and can make a call phone call with batteries going low. It takes time to track there location from a call, assuming there is a tower close enough to pick up the signal, and maybe the GPS coordinates make it easier. But like any good thing, bad things can often result from it.

People have been victimized by criminals taking advantage of the info in photos and other information I just posted on places like Facebook and Craig's list.

I usually save in a manner that will preserve my exif data, but if I had an iPhone, I would either turn it off or save it in a manner that strips off the exif. I think some photo hosting sites strip it off anyway like maybe Flickr.

52 posted on 04/20/2011 11:37:56 AM PDT by Aliska
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To: Aliska

That particular feature (GPS info for each photo) can be turned on and off, and isn’t as convoluted as the issue that started this thread. I can actually see a legitimate use for GPS locations for photos - especially for keeping up with either legal documentation, or for simply keeping up with pictures you have taken. But if you don’t want that data in other people’s hands, then removing it before sending is the best option.


56 posted on 04/20/2011 12:15:54 PM PDT by TheBattman (They exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature...)
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To: Aliska
He needs to turn off location tagging for his photos. The tagging can be useful, as the better photo library programs use that to help you organize your photos by place (imagine all the pictures you take on a vacation). If he wants to strip the data from photos before sending, it can be done with the better image editing programs, or with special-purpose EXIF cleaning programs (EXIF is the format of all the metadata in your photo). I believe there are such programs available from the App Store too.
61 posted on 04/20/2011 1:39:10 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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