Strip the CR tag
from your human posts.
Drop a pic. We pull the Content Credentials metadata — that's the C2PA / JUMBF blob behind LinkedIn's AI image badge — and hand you back a clean copy. 10 seconds. No login. Then we forget you were ever here.Choose an image. We remove the Content Credentials metadata behind LinkedIn's CR badge and return a clean copy.
Used by 237 creators this week
The badge that's been quietly tanking your reach.
One side is what gets posted today. The other is what we send back.
Spent the weekend redesigning our onboarding. Conversion is already up 14%. 👇
CR badgeno badgeThree steps. Roughly ten seconds.
The kind of tool you forget you're using until you need it twice in a row.
Drop the pic.
Drag from Finder, Lightroom export, Photoshop, whatever. PNG, JPEG, WebP up to 10 MB.
We yank the metadata.
C2PA manifest, JUMBF box, the whole Content Credentials chain. Pixels stay byte-for-byte.
Post it like it never happened.
Download. Upload to LinkedIn. No badge. We delete the file the moment you hit download.
The little badge
nobody asked for.
LinkedIn quietly started flagging photos with a small CR mark — the Content Credentials icon — whenever they detect C2PA / JUMBF metadata baked into the file. Some creators love it. Most of us would rather not advertise the recipe.
Almost everything spits out a Content Credentials manifest these days: Photoshop, Lightroom, Firefly, Midjourney, DALL·E, ChatGPT image gen, Pixelmator Pro, and even iPhone / Pixel cameras when the Content Credentials toggle is on. That's why the LinkedIn AI image badge shows up on photos you literally took yourself.