This is a discussion on Missing EXIF Data within the General photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; Originally Posted by Richard Guilty! I'll try and remember to include my exif for you guys in the future. I ...
With me it stems from when I take photos for work. Once I hand them to a the marketing department, they are passed on to dealers around the globe, I have no idea where they might end up. For example, if they end up on a corporate website I think it looks more professional to have the exif stripped out. Because I got in to a habit of doing this at work, I ended up doing it for my own photos as well with out giving it much thought.
I don't see any reason to strip it. There isn't anything there that's unusual, and I don't have anything that provides GPS coordinates (the only thing that might very occasionally be of concern), so why add a step to my process? I don't imagine the data adds much to the file size. I also don't think most people know it's there or how to look for it. If they do, I hope it's useful to them. I shoot more by fiddling, rather than by deliberate settings most of the time, so I'm not sure they'd learn much from my settings.
I used to hide it in Flickr due to an obsession with internet privacy, without thinking through if there were are real implications. Privacy just for privacy sake. I relaxed that more recently and changed my default settings on Flickr. After looking at it again as a result of this post , I have just realised that since I have been using Photoshop (just a couple of months) that the default for "save to web" is to strip the metadata. I will play with these settings and change this.
Bookmarks