Calabi Labs · Guide · 2026-05-24
Strip or inspect Content Credentials metadata from any image — completely free, right in your browser. No upload, no account, no card.
C2PA (Content Provenance and Authenticity) is an open standard that embeds cryptographic metadata directly into an image's file to record its origin, edit history, and chain of custody. Think of it as a tamper-evident digital provenance label baked into the file itself — not just a caption or tag, but cryptographically signed claims that cameras, editing tools, or AI platforms can write and verify.
You'll often hear this referred to as Content Credentials. When an image carries C2PA data, it may include details like:
This metadata lives embedded in the file itself, not in a sidecar or external database. C2PA is backed by major initiatives including the C2PA Consortium, the Adobe-led Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI), and standards organizations like the JPEG Forum.
People look for a C2PA metadata remover for several practical reasons:
It's worth noting that C2PA metadata is designed to be verifiable, not easily strippable — which is intentional. But for personal privacy, offline archives, or legitimate workflow reasons, stripping it from your own files is a valid need.
Calabi by Calabi Labs gives you a free, browser-based way to inspect and strip C2PA/Content Credentials metadata from your images. Here's how it works:
Calabi targets and strips the full range of C2PA-related metadata including:
C2PA and c2pa XMP namespacesAssert and Manifest blocks (JUMBF boxes)xmpRM and provenance-related Dublin Core fieldsStructural image data stays intact — your photo or graphic remains visually identical. Only the metadata layer is removed.
No. EXIF stores technical camera info (ISO, shutter speed, GPS) and is easily stripped with standard tools. C2PA is fundamentally different — it's cryptographically signed provenance data designed to persist through re-encoding and resist tampering. Removing it requires a tool that specifically understands the C2PA/JUMBF structure.
Only if the metadata was legitimate and verifiable in the first place. Removing C2PA data from your own files before sharing them is a privacy choice, not a deception. C2PA is a feature, not a mandate — creators control their own content's metadata.
They're the same ecosystem. "Content Credentials" is the user-facing brand (used by Adobe, CameraBits, and others); "C2PA" is the technical standard. A file with Content Credentials has C2PA metadata embedded in it.
C2PA is currently embedded in JPEG, HEIC/HEIF, and PNG files using the JUMBF (JPEG Universal Metadata Box Format) standard. Support is expanding to video formats as the standard matures.
Yes. 3 free cleans per day, no credit card required. For higher volume usage, Calabi Labs offers paid plans.
Calabi processes files in-browser. Your image never leaves your device — no server upload, no third-party storage. What you process stays on your machine.
It's the fastest free option available — no install, no sign-up, no friction. Upload, preview, clean, and download in seconds.
Try Calabi free at calabilabs.com — 3 cleans, no card.