Do people underestimate GPS metadata in shared photos?(exif-cleaner.com)
exif-cleaner.com
Do people underestimate GPS metadata in shared photos?
https://exif-cleaner.com/
3 comments
GPS data is so easily spoofed these days that I treat any image or video containing it to be de facto false. GPS data is just time signatures from at least 5 different satellites of a network of over 40+. Having specific satellite RAIM details embedded in EXIF would be an issue, but general GPS information in EXIF is no more self-snitching than the content of the photo and the social media platform you post it to. It's far easier to dox without GPS and any available EXIF location data should only be used as non-primary information to corroborate existing hypotheses, not generate new ones.
Thanks for the detailed explanation — very clear and grounded. Given how trivial GPS spoofing has become, what signals do you personally weight higher when validating media? Things like sensor noise patterns, shadow geometry, lens distortion consistency, upload timing correlations, or cross-referencing with known environmental data (weather, sun position)?
I’m curious where you draw the line between weak corroboration and actionable confidence.
I’m curious where you draw the line between weak corroboration and actionable confidence.
Even when users are aware of EXIF data in general, GPS coordinates seem to be treated as “probably not there” or “harmless”, especially when sharing images outside social networks (forums, blogs, marketplaces).
I’m curious how people here think about this in practice: – Do you assume photos you share still contain location data? – Have you ever seen real-world privacy issues caused specifically by GPS metadata? – Do you rely on platforms stripping metadata, or do you clean images yourself before sharing?
Interested in hearing perspectives from people who’ve worked with journalism, security, OSINT, or just learned this the hard way.