Face blur is one part of image privacy, not the whole job. These guides explain how to choose a redaction method, review AI results, reduce identification risk, and build a repeatable sharing workflow.
Automatic face detection can save minutes on a group photo, but privacy depends on what the system misses. Human review remains the control that turns detection into responsible redaction.
School and youth photos combine emotional value with unusually high privacy stakes. A reliable workflow must connect consent, face redaction, contextual review, and controlled distribution.
Blur, pixelation, and solid covers are not interchangeable. The best choice depends on the harm of recognition, the image resolution, and how much visual context must remain.
A face blur is not automatically permanent privacy. The real question is whether the edited image still contains enough visual and contextual information to identify the person.
Protecting privacy on social media takes more than changing an account setting. This 15-point checklist helps you review and redact an image before sharing it.