[–] MoteMoteKek11 ago
I sent one of the many pictures of a Jew sucking a freshly cut baby penis over messenger to a group of all IRL people. The pic was taking forever to load, never sent, and within 5 minutes I was banned. I checked my buddies phones to see if it got through in person, of course it never did.
[–] MoteMoteKek11 ago
Really have no idea, I can only assume our chat was being monitored after key words were used like “god damn kikes” and when they saw me try and send the photo they stopped it and banned me. It is faceberg messenger after all.
[–] 9000timesempty ago
All digital cameras and phones put what's called called EXIF data in all photos. Everything from GPS coordinates, the make and model of the phone/camera to the color data on the photo. But is Facebook is adding a call home though? How can that work? Wouldn't something have to know that instruction before executing it? So the instruction is for Facebook apps then. I doubt tracing outside af a Facebook environment. Facebook would have to scour and keep track of all photos online. It's more a of a "tag" really, of who in facebooks's environment, is the original owner of the photo.
[–] OricaTonithos ago
After some looking. Folks might want to scrub the things they'll consider re-posting. A quick way to drop much of this is to pull it into a photo editor like GIMP where you have some authorship over the image to tweak or remove the EXIF data before exporting to another file format i.e.: .jpg .png .bmp .gif
Or,
One way is to use a program like "ExifPilot" https://hooktube.com/watch?v=SjFEHHlOBGM
Or other tools available for free online. https://www.geckoandfly.com/7987/how-to-change-exif-data-date-and-camera-properties-with-free-editor/
This is a good one, free to use for non-commercial.. license required if commercial. https://www.xnview.com/en/xnviewmp/#downloads
[–] EpiPendemic 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
last time I put any thought into this topic was the fiasco about celebs discovering the geotagging data for pics taken iphone3. I see a lot of value in being able to track the image itself vs just where the pic was take.