Every photo you take quietly records where you stood, when you stood there, and what device was in your hand. Most people share those facts dozens of times a week without knowing it.
MetaMarshal exists to make that visible — and reversible. Drop a photo in and it shows you, in plain language, everything the file says about you. Then it lets you strip exactly what you choose and hands back a clean copy.
The part we care most about: your photo never leaves your device. Not “we delete it after processing” — it never travels at all. Reading, editing and exporting happen inside your browser. The only two actions that ever send anything out are resolving an address (bare coordinates) and the optional AI location estimate (a downscaled copy) — each behind its own explicit tap.
For teams that need this at scale, the MetaMarshal API applies the same philosophy to servers: files are processed in memory, results self-destruct on a one-hour timer, and content is never logged. We call it zero-retention — process and forget.
MetaMarshal is small, fast, and honest about what it does. That’s the whole pitch.