Do your photos put your privacy at risk?



Do you love sharing photos with your family and friends online? It turns out you might be sharing a lot more personal information than you think. Consumer
Reports reveals how the photos you post online may contain surprising hidden data that could put you or your family at risk.



When you take a photo with a digital camera or a phone, details about things like when, where, and how the images were created are captured and stored
automatically in a file in what’s called Exif data, which is short for Exchangeable Image File Format. That information travels with the photo wherever you send it, whether you’re posting it online or sharing it with a friend in a text.

Consumer Reports says that Exif data can be very useful. When you store photos in Google Photos or iCloud Photos, Exif data is preserved so that you can search for the photos by date and location. Both services allow you remove location data from individual photos.

If you share pictures using Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or WhatsApp, the Exif data won’t be available to the people who see them.



Consumer Reports spoke with representatives from the popular social media companies and they all said that Exif data isn’t used for advertising purposes. But some companies like Facebook and Twitter do say they use Exif data for analytics and other business purposes.

Remember that Exif data typically travels with photos you text or email, so keep that in mind when you’re sharing.



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