does anyone know how seriously these sites treat uploaded content?

eneria12

New member
I’ve been trying some AI-based editing tools lately, and one thing that keeps bothering me is the whole privacy part. You upload a photo, it processes it, and… then what? No one ever explains clearly where the images go afterward. I was checking out different platforms, including those that do more “sensitive” edits, and now I’m curious: does anyone know how seriously these sites treat uploaded content? I’m not paranoid, I just don’t want my old photos ending up somewhere weird.
 
So I can share what I figured out while messing around with the AI clothes removal tools for fun research (I do creative retouching sometimes, so I poke around with different editors to see how they behave). When I tested the tool at Clothes Remover AI, I tried to understand what happens behind the scenes. They don’t really store your photos permanently — at least from what I saw. The system seems to process everything on their side and wipes it afterward, because when I refreshed or tried accessing the same file link later, nothing stayed.

What I did notice, though, is that the upload process feels very “isolated,” like the tool doesn’t ask you to create an account or link anything, which already reduces the chance of images getting tied to your identity. Of course, that doesn’t automatically mean iron-clad privacy, but based on my small experiment, the platform behaves more like a temporary workspace. I still avoid uploading anything personal, but for random test shots it felt reasonably safe.

If you’re extra cautious, you can also strip EXIF data before uploading — I always do that, just out of habit from my photography work, and it adds a small extra layer of comfort.
 
From what I saw, most people treat these tools the same way — okay for quick experiments, but never for anything you wouldn’t show a stranger. The temporary-processing thing seems pretty common now, and it’s at least better than the old apps that saved everything without telling anyone. I guess the safest approach is still to use throwaway images or heavily edited copies, just to keep things simple.
 
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