Taking photos with a cell phone

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Ed Sims, Sep 2, 2014.

  1. Ed Sims

    Ed Sims Well-Known Member

    Hi all,

    I was browsing another forum and I stumbled upon this post which was in regards to a post with pictures taken with OP's cell phone.

    "Your phone is saving the GPS data for where your photos were taken. You will want to disable that, I can see where you live or where you took these pics. Right near Eagle Rock Reservation."

    That is scary. Someone can get your location just by the data collected by your cell phone from a photograph.
     
    Endeavor likes this.
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  3. Numismania

    Numismania You hockey puck!!

    It is scary, but it is life in the 2000's, I guess. Upon setup of my phones, I always disable it. I just had the need for a new iPhone, and I'm pretty sure it flat out asked me. Though, some smartphones DO produce good, not great, but good, coin images.
     
  4. Numismat

    Numismat World coin enthusiast

    Yea, on the iphone I disabled "location services", that took care of it.
     
  5. Tom B

    Tom B TomB Everywhere Else

    It's not just with an iPhone, but with any digital camera that has GPS enabled and embedded in the image data.
     
    geekpryde likes this.
  6. geekpryde

    geekpryde Husband and Father Moderator

    If you use a photo editing app like Adobe Lightroom, one of the settings on the export of a file to a .jpg is to selectively remove certain metadata, as show below:

    upload_2014-9-3_0-13-35.png

    As you can see, you basically set-it-and-forget-it.

    Here are some of the choices:

    upload_2014-9-3_0-14-5.png





    It's a scary world, but being aware of your options allows you some control over the chaos.
     
  7. CalicoJack

    CalicoJack New Member

  8. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Not anything new but yes, one (we) should know about such features. Here is an interesting experiment: http://iknowwhereyourcatlives.com/ Make sure you read the "About" page ...

    Admittedly I often turn location data on when traveling. It's nice to know, on a longer trip for example, where this or that photo was taken. But the default setting is "off" here.

    Christian
     
    CalicoJack likes this.
  9. carboni7e

    carboni7e aka MonsterCoinz

    Regardless if you have a new smart phone, or an old 2000's Canon, there will be meta data in the image. Of course, a smart phone is needed for geo-location data
     
  10. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    I got's a bead on ya brother....... devil.gif
     
  11. brg5658

    brg5658 Well-Known Member

    Just an FYI: Photobucket can strip location data from uploaded images if you click the correct options in your account.

    [​IMG]
     
    green18 and Dougmeister like this.
  12. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    Who's paranoid now?

    I don't even know how to turn on GPS. And I don't plan on knowing. And I never quite figured out the benefit (to me) of starting a CIA guest book account on "social media."

    I also have this quaint habit of looking
    up directions on a paper street map.
     
  13. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Ah yes, I vaguely remember those. ;) Paper maps are great for planning trips, or if you decide to take some scenic route. But when it comes to simply getting from A to B ...

    And yes, of course the manufacturer or phone company of my navigation device knows where I go. But in this case the effect (sort of swarm intelligence) is wanted, and the location data do not go elsewhere.

    Christian
     
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