On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 10:35:35AM -0800, Bob Scofield wrote: > In Linux there are a couple of different ways I can get the date and time the > photo was taken.
I picked a random photo I took with a Canon digital camera a few years ago. The date/timestamp of the file on my laptop was from 9:05pm on the day the photo was taken. However, using "File->Properties..." in Gwenview, and looking at the metadata stored in the file itself, it was stamped as 8:05pm of that day. I'm guessing the timestamp in the metadata is off by an hour because I never adjusted the clock inside my camera to account for Daylight Savings time change. (In other words, the camera THOUGHT it was 8:05pm, so that's the metadata it stored.) Note that it's probably quite trivial to tweak the timetamp of a file and/or the metadata within the file. Or, in my case, for the times to simply be all screwed up since the device didn't know the correct time. (My answering machine is a good example of a clock that needs hand-holding: it always resets to "Monday, January 1, 12:00am" when its power is cycled. It doesn't know what year it is or what time zone it's in, and (therefore) it cannot adjust for daylight savings or leap years.) BTW - I am not a forensics guy, and I don't even really know much about image file metadata. -- -bill! Sent from my computer _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [email protected] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
