kbnpbnmjmgabkfemdehelbgdppngihhg
View the EXIF data in your photos. Select photos on your device or on a web page. Simply right-click on an image in a web page. This free tool lets you open an image from your device, or from a URL, and view its Exif data. You can view the Exif data of a image on any web page by right-click the image and selecting View Exif Info. If the photo contains GPS data, you can view a Google map of the photo's location in a browser tab. There's lots of interesting information held in image files for you to explore. Some images have GPS data, so you can see exactly where it was taken. Some camera makes (like Nikon and FujiFilm) also record the camera's shutter count in the Exif data. A history of your last 10 image URLs is saved for faster selection. Explore other tools from LinangData from the More tools menu, including: Color Picker, Photo Editor; Sketch; the LinangData YouTube channel, etc.
Fake news debunker InVID WeVerify VeraAI
InVID WeVerify VeraAI extension This plugin has been designed as a verification “Swiss army knife” helping journalists, fact-checkers, and human rights defenders to save time and be more efficient in their fact-checking and debunking tasks on social networks especially when verifying videos and images. This browser extension was enriched with new tools, developed within the Horizon EU research and innovation action vera.ai (2022-2025; https://veraai.eu/). In 2021, the plugin won a US Paris Tech challenge first prize award granted by the US Department Global Engagement Center (GEC). For the Poynter Institute, home of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN), it is "one of the most powerful tools for spotting misinformation online". This toolbox allows you to quickly get contextual information on Facebook and Twitter images and videos, as well as on Youtube videos, to perform reverse image search on several engines, to query the new Database of Known Fakes (DBKF), to fragment videos from various platforms (Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, Twitter, Daily Motion) into keyframes, to enhance and explore keyframes and images through a magnifying lens, to query Twitter more efficiently through time intervals and through a new Social Network Analysis module, to read video and image metadata, to check the video copyrights, to quickly search for fact checks or cross-network queries, and to apply a new enhanced forensic toolbox on images suspected of being manipulated. Another new forensic module, CheckGIF made in the EnVisu4 IFCN project, allows you to create a GIF between a manipulated image and an original one to better reveal the manipulation. New beta tools, for registered users, include a synthetic image detector from vera.ai project and an audio voice cloning detector provided by the US company Hiya.com after acquisition of the Spanish startup Loccus. An assistant feature will help you to find which tool can be used to support your verification work. The plugin is currently provided in English, French, Spanish, Greek, Arabic, Italian, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil) and Hungarian language. A demo and a classroom section provide examples of manipulated images or videos together with explanations and media literacy tools and tips about the information verification process, for teachers and scholars. New tools developed in the IFCN DisinfoArchiving project (2024-2025) allow you (upon registration) to better archive traces of disinformation using the WACZ format (Web Archive Collection Zipped). A feedback button is available directly in the interface. Thanks to use it to report any bug, any issue (providing the link of the media to be checked), or any improvement suggestion, in this way. We welcome and need your feedback. Thank you. The plugin respects your privacy and no personal data is recorded. Caching of content is used by various partner tools for about one day to significantly improve UX. We use Matomo to better understand usage but you can opt out if you wish so (from the checkbox at the bottom of the About page). Some features (Twitter SNA, CheckGIF, GIF export on forensic toolkit) are reserved to fact-checkers, journalists and researchers due to the high demanding computer power needed and to avoid misuse. All versions of the plugin has been developed so far by AFP Medialab R&D through three EU-funded research projects and underlying web services provided by scientific partners. It was initially launched in July 2017 during the InVID European project, a EU Horizon 2020 innovation action (grant agreement 687786; https://www.invid-project.eu ; @InVID_EU). Then, it was enhanced with more tools during the EU Horizon 2020 WeVerify project (grant agreement 825297; https://weverify.eu/ @WeVerify). Currently, the plugin is part of the Horizon vera.ai project (Grant Agreement 101070093; https://twitter.com/veraai_eu) aiming to use artificial intelligence versus disinformation. Existing tools using AI will be enhanced and new tools will be co-created with end-users. Disclaimer: this software is provided "as is", without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and non infringement. In no event shall the authors or copyright holders be liable for any claim, damages or other liability, whether in an action of contract, tort or otherwise, arising from, out of or in connection with the software or the use or other dealings in the software.
EXIF Metadata Viewer - Find Information About Images
View EXIF metadata from images - camera settings, GPS location and more with a right-click. For photographers and privacy users. Ever wondered about the story behind a photo you see online? The EXIF Metadata Viewer extension lets you instantly reveal the hidden details embedded within images, directly from the context menu in your browser. All you need to do is right-click on an image to find out if the image has the following details stored: Camera settings: Find the make and model of the camera used, along with settings like aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. Location data: See where the photo was taken (if GPS data is available). Date and time: Know exactly when the image was captured. And much more: Uncover other valuable metadata, such as software used, artist information, and more. It's easy to use: Simply right-click on any image and select "View EXIF Data." We respect your privacy and don't collect any personal data. This project is open source and the source code can be found at: https://github.com/ternera/exif-viewer
Exif Metadata Viewer
Read meta information of audio, video, image, PDF, and many more files (powered by ExifTool) The "Metadata Viewer" extension allows you to read metadata headers in image, audio, video, and PDF files. It utilizes the ExifTool library by Phil Harvey to read metadata information in the file header of a wide range of file formats. The extension runs on an isolated window. It can read many metadata including EXIF, and ID3. For a complete list of supported formats visit: https://exiftool.org/#supported
IPTC Photo Metadata inspector
Right-click on any image and select "View IPTC Photo Metadata". IPTC's GetPMD tool shows all metadata embedded in the image. Many images on the web contain embedded metadata such as creator, location, copyright and licensing information, even people and products depicted. IPTC's Photo Metadata Inspector tool lets you see embedded metadata in many image files. For eligible images, a context menu will appear when you right-click on the image. Select "View IPTC Photo Metadata" and you will be taken to IPTC's Get Photo Metadata (GetPMD) tool which will display all metadata embedded in the image file. NOTE that this tool needs to download your image from the web to process it. Therefore it does not work with local images accessed via file:// URLs.