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Metadades de vídeo: què revelen els teus fitxers

Els vídeos contenen dades ocultes com ubicació i informació del dispositiu. Aprèn com eliminar-les.


Video Metadata: What Your Files Reveal About You

When you record a video on your phone, more than the footage is captured. Hidden within the file is metadata: information about when, where, and how the video was created. Understanding this data helps you make informed decisions about privacy when sharing videos.

What Metadata Do Videos Contain?

Modern video files can include:

Metadata TypeExample DataPrivacy Level
GPS LocationExact coordinatesHigh concern
TimestampDate and time recordedMedium
Device InfoPhone model, cameraLow
SoftwareEditing app usedLow
DurationVideo lengthNone
Resolution1920x1080None

⚠️
WARNING

A video's GPS coordinates can reveal your home address, workplace, or travel patterns to anyone who accesses the file.


Where Metadata Comes From

Recording Device


Your phone or camera embeds information automatically:
  • GPS coordinates (if location is enabled)

  • Device manufacturer and model

  • Recording date and time

  • Camera settings (exposure, aperture)


Editing Software


When you edit video, applications may add:
  • Software name and version

  • Edit history

  • Export settings

  • User/license information


Platform Processing


When you upload to platforms:
  • Most strip sensitive metadata

  • Some add their own identifiers

  • Original metadata may be in backups


Viewing Metadata Before Sharing

Before sharing any video, especially privately recorded content, consider inspecting the metadata:

Check for:

  • Geographic coordinates

  • Creation timestamps

  • Personal identifiers

  • Device serial numbers


When Metadata Matters

Sharing Personal Videos


Family videos often contain location data from home. Before sharing outside trusted circles, stripping GPS is prudent.

Business Content


Corporate videos may reveal:
  • Office locations

  • Device inventory (via serial numbers)

  • Software licenses

  • Employee device assignments


Sensitive Situations


For whistleblowers, journalists, or anyone sharing sensitive video:
  • Metadata removal is essential

  • Consider additional anonymization

  • Verify removal before publication


💡
TIP

Many social platforms automatically strip metadata on upload. However, if you share the original file (via email, messaging, file transfer), metadata travels with it.


How to Remove Metadata

Browser-Based Tools


Upload your video, metadata is stripped, clean version downloads.

Advantages:

  • No software installation

  • Works on any device

  • Quick and simple


Mobile Apps


Various apps strip metadata on-device.

Advantages:

  • Good for regular mobile use

  • Can automate removal


Desktop Software


FFmpeg and similar tools offer complete control.

Advantages:

  • Batch processing

  • Selective removal

  • Scriptable


What Platforms Do With Metadata

YouTube


Strips most metadata from public video. Retains internal records.

Instagram/TikTok


Remove GPS and device details from public posts. Retain data internally.

Direct Sharing (Email, Message)


No stripping whatsoever. The exact file you send is what recipients receive, metadata included.

🔮
IMPORTANT

The metadata risk is highest with direct file sharing. Platform uploads typically remove sensitive data from public access, but direct shares preserve everything.


Technical Details

Common Container Formats

MP4 (MPEG-4)

  • Stores metadata in "atoms"

  • GPS in moov/udta/©xyz atom

  • Extensive metadata support


MOV (QuickTime)
  • Similar to MP4

  • Additional Apple-specific metadata

  • Often includes device identifiers


WebM
  • Minimal metadata by design

  • Modern web-focused format

  • Generally privacy-friendly


Metadata Persistence

Metadata removal must happen before sharing. It cannot be "recalled" once a file with metadata has been transmitted.

Some metadata persists through editing:

  • Original creation date

  • Source device information

  • Edit history (in some editors)


Best Practices

  1. Review before sharing – Check metadata on any video before sending

  2. Strip when uncertain – When in doubt, remove metadata entirely

  3. Consider your audience – Trusted recipients vs. public sharing have different risk profiles

  4. Use platform uploads – When sharing publicly, platforms typically strip sensitive data

  5. Keep originals separate – Archive original files with metadata; share cleaned versions


Conclusion

Video metadata isn't inherently problematic – it's useful for organizing and searching your media. The issue arises when sharing videos that contain location data, device identifiers, or other information you'd prefer to keep private.

For personal videos shared with family or publicly, stripping GPS coordinates is reasonable precaution. For sensitive content, thorough metadata removal should be standard practice.

Understanding what your videos contain helps you make informed choices about when to share the original file versus a cleaned version.

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