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Detect and remove C2PA Content Credentials, AI provenance tags (ChatGPT, DALL-E, Sora, Midjourney, Firefly), EXIF, GPS and XMP from any image. Everything happens in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
Drop images here or click to choose
JPEG, PNG, WebP, HEIC. Batch supported. Stays in your browser.
AI image generators like ChatGPT, DALL-E, Sora, Midjourney, Adobe Firefly and Microsoft Designer quietly embed provenance metadata, including C2PA Content Credentials, into every image they create. Platforms like LinkedIn and Meta read these tags and automatically label your post as AI-generated.
This tool detects the AI source, shows you exactly what is embedded, and strips it in one click. It also removes regular EXIF data such as GPS coordinates, camera serial numbers, and timestamps, so any photo you upload stays anonymous. Everything runs locally; nothing is uploaded.
Names the AI generator (OpenAI, Midjourney, Firefly) when Content Credentials are present.
Strips EXIF, XMP, IPTC, ICC, C2PA and GPS in a single pass.
Canvas re-encode for total wipe, or byte-level for pixel-perfect output.
Drop a folder, clean every file, get one ZIP back.
Runs entirely in your browser. No upload, no signup, no logs.
JPEG, PNG, WebP and HEIC. Pick the output format you want.
Yes. ChatGPT, DALL-E, Sora and other OpenAI tools embed C2PA Content Credentials that mark the image as AI-generated. This tool detects them, names the source, and strips them along with every other metadata block.
C2PA (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) is a cryptographic signature embedded by Adobe Firefly, OpenAI, Microsoft Designer and others that proves an image is AI-generated. Platforms like LinkedIn and Meta read these credentials and automatically label your post. Removing the C2PA chunk removes that label.
Nothing is uploaded. The entire process runs in your browser using JavaScript. Your images never leave your device.
Canvas re-encode redraws the image and exports a fresh file with zero metadata. It is the most thorough but recompresses slightly. Byte-level strip surgically removes metadata segments while keeping the original pixel bytes intact, preferred for archival or print.
No. Metadata is data about the image (camera, GPS, AI source) and does not affect the pixels. The cleaned file looks identical.