Image Metadata: EXIF, IPTC, and XMP Explained
Digital images contain hidden metadata that reveals camera settings, location data, and copyright information. Understand the three major metadata standards and how to manage them.
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Three Metadata Standards
Digital images can contain metadata in three overlapping standards, each with different origins and strengths.
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format)
EXIF data is written by cameras and smartphones at capture time. It records technical settings: aperture, shutter speed, ISO, focal length, flash status, date/time, and GPS coordinates. EXIF is limited to JPEG and TIFF formats. It cannot be easily extended with custom fields.
IPTC (International Press Telecommunications Council)
IPTC metadata was designed for news photography workflows. It stores descriptive information: caption, photographer name, copyright notice, keywords, location name, and usage rights. IPTC fields are standardized across the industry, making them the foundation of stock photography metadata.
XMP (Extensible Metadata Platform)
Adobe's XMP format uses XML to store metadata that can be extended with custom schemas. XMP can contain all EXIF and IPTC data plus application-specific data like Lightroom develop settings, Photoshop layer information, and custom workflows. XMP works with virtually any file format.
Privacy Considerations
GPS coordinates in EXIF data can reveal your home address, workplace, and daily patterns. Before sharing images online, strip location data and any other personally identifying metadata. Camera serial numbers and lens identifiers can also be used to track photographers across images.
Metadata Preservation During Conversion
Not all format converters preserve metadata. When converting between formats, verify that essential metadata (copyright, description, keywords) survives the conversion. JPEG to WebP conversions often strip EXIF data unless explicitly configured to preserve it.
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