The Photo Investigator Reviews – Page 10

4/5 rating based on 169 reviews. Read all reviews for The Photo Investigator for iPhone.
The Photo Investigator is free iOS app published by Daniel Anderson

Awful. Fake

SC Nutt

Can’t edit any of the metadata unless you purchase the pro version.


A boon

Ron Ames Photography

This app is great for camera phones..simple and informative for on the go when I don’t have my big camera.


Can’t find my pictures

Home owner1

It shows the meta information but that is if you can find the picture. The user interface for sorting the pictures makes no logical sense. I’m looking for the most recent pictures that was air dropped to me and I can’t find it even in the recently added folder. There’s like 3000+ pix to sort through.


Can I delete a video within your app?

enaid o

Is there a way to delete a video from within your app? when I go back in my camera roll I can’t compare things side-by-side so it’s a long process. I have compressed videos and want to ensure I am deleting the correct ones --


1.21 GB?

AIFIVE

Seemed like a good app for viewing metadata but somehow an app thats supposed to help me view the size of pictures and videos grew to over 1 GB in memory... no reasonable explanation for why this needed to be... uninstalled


Deceitful

ShUGASkUll

Worked to begin with but then it will not even open gallery. I feel very let down since I’ve already paid for the app and it will not work, plus the developer will not refund. I know it’s not a lot of $$, but each little pop from a hopeful soul wanting meta data from a pic.. this dev is rackin in some cash!


Disappointing

MissyRNNC

Don’t wait your money. The only photos the GPS work on are ones your take with your phone which already has the location.


It’s great if you’re ...

inkstainedwretch ,retd.

Dumb enough to let the world know where you are! Until Apple comes up with a method to SEND dummy GPS signals from your phone to (everybody), you NEED to keep it turned off - unless: A) at accident scene or other something where you want to prove where you were at a given point in timespace. B) You’re so totally lost you’ll hive anything for a map. B isn’t so bad a privacy loss because you’ve probably never been there before. A is a privacy loss, but hood for evidence. Problem is, the system is a DATATHEFT system. A proper GPS tool is receive-only. Preload your route finder with REGIONAL maps of places you plan to be and not be, activate receiver and get your location attached to videos and photos, or track yourself on map and let LOCAL cpu set/reset your route. But there’s nothing in it for Apple, your service provider, or Google, Mapquest and the like. What business is it to anybody where you are? Looking up nearby restaurants, gas stations, and the like provides 10+ more bits of information to datasellers traders and mashup artists and the like hey should NOT be able to just steal from you! You don’t even have a right to negotiate -you sign software agreement as-is, or you cannot even use programs you PAY for! Use this if you forgot to urn off gps and don’t want anyone to lift your photos and find out where you took erotic photos of your SO But if Apple really believed in privacy, you could keep your GPS on almost all the time and never worry about Big Brother. If Apple is committed to privacy, anybody trying to extract your location, If someone did, they’d get photo metadata saying shot was taken in the middle of (random) ocean far off the shipping lanes. If trying to find out where you are, phone would shoot out random numbers 500/3,000+ miles away from your real location, updating them every 10 seconds with fresh garbage. But Apple, Verizon etc. make a fortune off selling yout location, even after your buy a phone for 200% more than manufacturing costs and PAY monthly fees to use it, Write your members of Congress, demanding a halt, and they find votes beat patronage, which drops to nothing when you’ve voted iut.


Uh thanks not

Jren421

For the app that shows me what my phone shows me then charges me to remove it. I would have bought one if I wanted that. Worst.


Free to “see”

Cheese n rice

Free download to view metadata that you’ve probably already seen before in your other editing software. If you want to edit or add anything, the app has a $3 price tag. I can’t comment on how good the app works because it’s not why I’m looking for at the moment but it does show metadata like it claims & says $3 to edit.