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Strip Exif Dataat Rust speed, fully offline.

Privacy promises mean little if a batch takes all night. MetaForge pairs a one-time purchase with a native Rust engine that chews through tens of thousands of files on-device — no telemetry, no account, no uploads.

MetaForge pairs a native Rust engine with a strict local-first model: it chews through huge folders on-device, makes no network calls, and is a one-time purchase.

$3.79 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · No subscription · Instant install via the Microsoft Store

Buy through the Microsoft Store—instant install, automatic updates, and a Microsoft receipt for easy expensing. No account needed on our site, and no subscription.

Full MetaForge overview
One-time purchase No telemetry Local-first

local-first · buy direct · one-time purchase · no telemetry

If this sounds like your week

Privacy tools that crawl get abandoned mid-job.

When strip exif data comes up during planning, the folders are usually large — full cards and drive migrations, not a handful of hobby shots. remove all exif metadata from photos before posting windows 11 offline privacy 2026. Throughput is what decides whether the policy actually gets followed.

Where tooling usually breaks

“Free” tools usually monetize attention, not trust.

Telemetry-heavy utilities have incentives that do not belong anywhere near client assets. A paid, offline desktop tool keeps the relationship simple: you bought it, it runs on your machine, and it makes no network calls.

Where MetaForge lands

MetaForge: saturate your cores, feed no telemetry.

A native Rust engine works through tens of thousands of files locally, with a live progress overlay showing throughput. There are no uploads, no account, and no network calls — just a one-time purchase that runs entirely on your hardware.

$3.79 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · No subscription · Instant install via the Microsoft Store

Buy through the Microsoft Store—instant install, automatic updates, and a Microsoft receipt for easy expensing. No account needed on our site, and no subscription.

Learn more about MetaForge

local-first · buy direct · one-time purchase · no telemetry

What you get

Feature highlights

Privacy Mode

Strip GPS coordinates, altitude, and camera serial numbers from a whole folder locally — no browser uploader, no cloud service.

Simulate Run preview

Generate a Simulation Report of every planned move and rename, flagged name collisions, and RAW count before a single file is touched.

EXIF-aware Auto-Organize

Build folder structures from Year, Month, Camera Make, Camera Model, and file extension — route in place, into a sibling folder, or to a specific destination.

Batch rights & IPTC

Write copyright, author, and keyword fields across thousands of files at once, with XMP sidecar sync (Skip, Merge, or Backup & Merge) for RAW photos.

Rust-powered throughput

Saturate local CPU cores for fast scans and metadata operations on tens of thousands of files, with keep-originals copy mode and a live progress overlay.

Local-first and global

100% offline, no telemetry, no account, with a fully translated interface in 20 languages. One-time purchase on the Microsoft Store. One-time purchase. No subscriptions. Local-first.

Especially when

  • Strip GPS and sensitive photo metadata before sharing images with clients or platforms
  • Preview exactly what a batch metadata job will do before any file is changed
  • Organize large photo libraries locally by EXIF date, camera model, or lens
  • Batch-write copyright and IPTC keywords without sending files to cloud tools

Who benefits

Real-world scenarios

Operator enforcing a metadata policy

Your team has a rule that published images must carry no location, owner, or software metadata, but the source folders are a mix of JPEG, PNG, HEIC, and RAW files that each store data differently. Checking compliance by hand does not scale.

MetaForge runs one exhaustive removal pass across the mixed folder, previews the result, and keeps originals untouched. The policy becomes a repeatable step instead of a manual review, and the cleanup never leaves the workstation.

Photographer delivering a client gallery

You are about to upload a few hundred edited photos to a client gallery, and the originals came straight off the camera with GPS coordinates embedded. You do not want the shoot location traveling with every frame, but opening each file to check is not realistic.

You point MetaForge at the folder, enable Privacy Mode, and run Simulate Run. The report confirms GPS, altitude, and serial numbers will be removed from every file. You commit the batch, keep the originals by copying, and deliver clean images in one pass.

Anyone untangling a years-old photo dump

A single folder holds a decade of imports from phones, cameras, and chat apps, all stamped with the date they were copied rather than the date they were taken. Sorting by file date produces nonsense.

MetaForge reads each photo’s EXIF capture date and camera model and routes the files into a clean Year and Month structure. You preview the full set of moves with Simulate Run, then commit once it looks right.

Deep dive

Local-first throughput: why the Rust engine matters

Behind strip exif data is a practical truth: a privacy tool only gets used if it is fast enough to fit the workflow. MetaForge is built in Rust precisely so large batches finish in a reasonable time instead of running overnight, and every operation stays on your hardware. There are no uploads to wait on and no telemetry to opt out of — the speed and the privacy come from the same local-first design. The part that makes batch work safe is Simulate Run. Before MetaForge writes anything, it generates a Simulation Report listing every planned move and rename, flagging any name collisions it would auto-suffix, and counting the RAW files in the set. You read the plan, confirm it, and only then commit — and you can choose to keep originals by copying instead of moving. That preview step is what separates a confident batch pass from a script you run and hope about. Under the hood, MetaForge is a native Tauri and Rust application rather than a browser wrapper, so it can saturate your CPU cores and work through tens of thousands of files without sending any of them off the machine. A live progress overlay shows throughput as it runs, light and dark themes are built in, and the interface ships in 20 languages. It is a one-time purchase on the Microsoft Store for Windows 11 and Windows 10 — no subscription, no account, and no telemetry — so the tool behaves the same whether or not you are online.

Trusted by pragmatic desktop users

Built for people who prefer tools that stay local.

Real workflows: focus timers that stay visible, batches that never leave the disk, and renames you can rewind.

Customer review 01

PinPoint: Always On Top saves me so much time as I can organize all my report materials without having to flip between windows or tabs. I love the fact that it is straightforward and simple.

Senior Accountant · Manufacturing Company · United States · PinPoint

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Customer review 02

I used to get so frustrated when my Taskbar would freeze and disappear. Taskbar Sentinel has eliminated that pain without subjecting me to another subscription.

Darren · Calgary, Alberta, Canada · Taskbar Sentinel

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Customer review 03

OpticBatch and MetaForge are a lifesaver for me as a person with a passion for photography. They give me the ability to stay organized and keep personal information confidential when I post pictures online.

Sherri · United States · OpticBatch & MetaForge

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Quotes are shown with customer permission; names and locations appear as reviewers provided them.

Our Core Moat

Engineered to respect your system boundaries.

System Resource Monitor (Idle State Comparison)
Automata Labs sub-5MB idle memory footprint compared to generic Electron applications

Lightweight Native Stack

Compiled Rust core wrapped inside an optimized Tauri shell. No heavy background node loops or duplicate Chromium engines cooking your memory footprint (<5MB idle RAM).

100% Local-First Privacy

Executes entirely on-device with full offline isolation. Absolute zero background telemetry policies, no metrics aggregation, and zero mandatory cloud-sync accounts.

Perpetual Fallback Licenses

Pay a single, clear one-time purchase price. Own your specific native software utility execution tier permanently without artificial subscription paywalls or ongoing usage tax.

FAQ

Straight answers—no glossary dump

Is MetaForge a good fit for Strip Exif Data on Windows?

MetaForge is a native Windows app from Automata Labs for batch photo-metadata work: strip GPS and device data with Privacy Mode, organize libraries by EXIF, and write copyright and IPTC fields across thousands of files. Every operation runs locally with a Rust engine, and a Simulate Run preview shows the plan before anything is written. One-time purchase on the Microsoft Store, no telemetry, no account. It fits whenever strip exif data work piles up and you need a repeatable, on-device pass instead of a browser uploader or a one-off script.

Can I preview the changes before MetaForge writes anything?

Yes. Simulate Run produces a full report of every planned move, rename, and field edit before MetaForge touches a file. You review the plan, then commit only when it looks right — and you can keep originals by copying instead of moving.

Does removing metadata reduce my image quality?

No. Stripping metadata is not the same as recompressing pixels. MetaForge edits the embedded data — GPS, camera serial numbers, software tags, IPTC and XMP fields — without forcing another lossy JPEG pass. Your image data stays exactly as it was unless you deliberately re-encode it in another tool.

Do my photos get uploaded anywhere?

No. MetaForge is local-first: it runs offline, collects no telemetry, and needs no account. Every scan and metadata operation happens on your own disk with a Rust engine, which is the whole point for client work, unreleased shots, and anything an upload-based tool is not allowed to touch.

Does MetaForge replace ExifTool or the command line?

No single tool replaces everything, but MetaForge removes the need to memorize ExifTool flags for routine work. You get a visual batch workflow with a Simulation Report and folder routing on Windows, while command-line tools remain available for bespoke automation.

Scrub the invisible.
Route the unmanageable.

MetaForge is a native control panel for EXIF cleanup, sensitive metadata stripping, and high-throughput library routing—local cores, one-time purchase, no cloud upload queue.

$3.79 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · No subscription · Instant install via the Microsoft Store

Buy through the Microsoft Store—instant install, automatic updates, and a Microsoft receipt for easy expensing. No account needed on our site, and no subscription.

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Technical specifications

Technical specifications for procurement

Spec Implementation
Data Sovereignty 100% on-device EXIF/IPTC reads and writes; no upload pipeline for core metadata workflows
Telemetry Status Disabled; no analytics SDK in shipping builds
Core Runtime Rust engine with native macOS and Windows file I/O
Network Requirements Fully functional offline after install
Deployment Compatibility macOS (Apple Silicon + Intel); Windows via Microsoft Store and direct purchase
Supported formats JPEG, PNG, TIFF, HEIC (read), WebP, and common camera RAW sidecars
Licensing Perpetual one-time purchase; platform policy applies