About crwipe

You took the photo. Your phone, your hands, your moment. Then LinkedIn slapped a little CR badge on it like you faked the whole thing.

That badge means one thing: your image carries Content Credentials. A chunk of metadata called C2PA — JUMBF if you want the exact name. Photoshop adds it. Lightroom adds it. Firefly, Midjourney, ChatGPT, even recent iPhones with the toggle on. Most of the time you never asked for it.

crwipe removes that chunk. Nothing else. Your pixels stay byte-for-byte the same. Your EXIF (camera, date, the stuff you might actually want) stays too. Drop the image, get a clean copy back, post it. Ten seconds.

I built this because I hit the badge myself, and the fix everyone suggested was screenshot your own photo. That’s not a fix. That’s a workaround that wrecks your quality.

Here’s what crwipe is not. Not a login. Not a subscription. Not a place that keeps your files — they’re deleted the moment your download finishes. No pricing page, because there’s no price.

One feature, done right. That’s the whole thing.

Maybe you care about the CR badge. Maybe you don’t. If you do, the drop zone is one click away.

Built and run by one person. Bugs, questions, or hey-this-broke-on-a-WebP — email [email protected].

Independent project. Not affiliated with LinkedIn, Adobe, the C2PA, or any platform named here.