Protect Your Privacy with ImageMagick

Tutorials – ImageMagick

Article from Issue 201/2017
Author(s):

Ben Everard wants to keep his location open, but only vaguely.

The ImageMagick tool lets you do almost everything you would want to with an image. You can tweak, poke, prod, and otherwise meddle with pixels (Figure 1). In this tutorial, we'll look at how to use this tool to form a command that can help protect our privacy online. This is also the perfect excuse to see how we can use the Linux terminal to build up a complex, powerful command from many smaller commands.

Figure 1: If you ever need to interact with images from the command line, chances are that there's an ImageMagick tool for the job. Refer to ImageMagick.org to find out.

When you take pictures on a digital camera, a whole lot of information is stored along with the actual image. The exact information varies from camera to camera but might include things like the camera settings and location at which the picture was taken. This information is all useful until you start sharing the images online, at which point it can be used to trace exactly where you've been. Many tools will just remove the location data, but we want to be a little more clever. We want to keep the general area the picture was taken but remove the precision. We want a command that embeds the location to the nearest town. Rather than put this information in hard-to-read metadata, we want the info displayed in the image itself as a caption at the bottom. This can be done as shown in Listing 1.

Listing 1

Embed Location

 

Obviously, this command is a little complex, but don't worry. It's made up of lots of smaller bits that are all easy to understand. Let's break it down and look at it bit by bit. The two basic building blocks of this command are the pipe (|) and command substitution ($()). The pipe sends the output of one command to another. In some cases, we use this to send text from one command to the next; in other cases, we're sending images. Command substitution runs the command inside the brackets and inserts the text that the command outputs in the place of the dollar sign.

Let's first look at the command substitutions.

$(identify -format '%w' IMG_20170504_191133.jpg)

This uses the identify command (part of ImageMagick, so you might need to install this package via your package manager) to extract the width of the image. To test this command substitution, run it without the first dollar sign or opening and closing brackets. Obviously, you'll need to change the image name to an image you have.

The second command substitution is a little more complex (Listing 2).

Listing 2

Second Command Substitution

 

This itself contains a command substitution:

$(exiftool IMG_20170504_191133.jpg -n | grep 'GPS Pos' | cut -d ':' -f2 | cut -f2,3 -d" " | tr " " ",")

exiftool gets the metadata out of the image (we could use identify, but exiftool is better for formatting the GPS data in the way we need). The metadata is then piped to grep, which discards all of it other than the data that matches "GPS Pos" – the latitude and longitude. A pair of cut commands are used to first get everything after the colon, and then get the second and third fields (when separated by a space). This gives us the latitude and longitude with a space between them. But, as you'll see in a minute, we need them separated by a comma, so the final part of this subcommand is tr, which just replaces every space (and there is only one) with a comma.

Now, let's go back to the outer command substitution (Listing 3).

Listing 3

Outer Command Substitution

 

As you can see, we've put 1.0000,1.0000 where the previous command placed the latitude and longitude of the picture. The first part of this pipe uses the Google Maps API to get the closest address for this latitude and longitude in JSON format. By default, you're limited to 2,500 daily requests from the API, so if you have a lot of images, you may need to spread them out over several days.

We then use the jq command (which you may need to install via your package manager) to get the data we want out of this. The format for jq is a language in itself, but what we do is get the first item in the results list, and then loop through the address_components list inside this item. If the address_components item has a type of country or town, output the long_name.

This gives us the town and country on different lines (Figure 2). We would like them comma-separated, so use tr to first delete the quote marks, and then replace the newlines with commas. The final sed removes the last character, which is a comma.

Figure 2: The caption in the finished image means we'll never forget where we took the picture, and we can be confident that we can share it online without telling everyone where we live.

Let's now look at the full command with this data put in:

convert -size 680x100 -background '#00000080' -fill white caption:"Bristol,United Kingdom" miff:- | composite -gravity south -geometry +0+3 - IMG_20170504_191133.jpgannoimg.jpg

What was once a matted knot of commands is now reduced to two. Both are commands from ImageMagick: convert and composite. The first makes an image that's the same width as the image we're editing (from the first command substitution) and a hundred pixels high that has a black slightly transparent background and the text of the town where the picture was taken.

The command saves this new image in miff format (ImageMagick's own format) and sends this data to stdout where it's picked up by the pipe and sent to the next command. composite, as you might expect, takes two images and combines them. The -gravity and -geometry options tell composite to put the text horizontally at the bottom of the other image. The hyphen tells the command to take input from stdout, and the final two options are the original image and the newly modified image to save the output as.

This one massive command does all the modifying. The only thing left is to strip the metadata out of the image, which can be done with:

convert annoimage.jpg -strip strippedimg.jpg

Here ends our whistle-stop tour of ImageMagick and the Bash tools for composing commands. We haven't had time to look into all the options, but you should now have an idea of how you can put together several simple tools to build complex commands in a way that's almost endlessly flexible. Here, we've built a command that we've hand-coded for the specific image that we want to edit. As an extension, you could put this into a script that took an option for the image and performed this action on it or a command that iterated through a collection of images updating each one as it went.

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