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Every time you upload a PDF or image to a random “free” compression site, you’re giving them the entire file (sometimes including hidden metadata like GPS location, device info, timestamps, and embedded text) along with your IP address and usage patterns. You have no control over how long it’s stored, logged, analyzed, or breached later. Compression doesn’t require a server; it can run entirely in your browser or offline on your machine.

If you care about privacy, avoid uploading sensitive documents to third parties. You can download & use a tool like THIS for local compressions, or if you have Linux you can use tools like Ghostscript to compress locally.

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[-] Ulrich@feddit.org 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I mean the bigger problem is on the download, not upload. Many of those sites are inserting malware in your files.

But there are actually some sites that are open source, self hostable, and don't actually require you to upload files at all, they're processed on your local machine. Some examples are:

  • Mazanoke for photos
  • vert.sh for images audio docs and video
  • pdfding and Stirling pdf for pdf docs

Some actually local examples are:

  • constrict (Linux/flathub) for simple video compression
  • handbrake (IYKYK)
this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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