Well composed photo, as demonstrated in the example here, involves careful selection of the shooting angle and perspective. Typically this means the selection of the camera location relative to the subject, the field of view (or focal length) of the lens, and the actual shooting angle.
View large to admire the elegant lines, metallic texture, and the reflections.
Perhaps you have heard the story that someone got hold of the latest and final Harry Potter book Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, painstakingly photographed it page by page and posted the book on the internet. Now this person may be busted because he/she forgot to remove the EXIF data from the photos, which contains the camera’s (Canon Digital Rebel 350D) serial number. This news article quoted a Canon official who said,
“From what we know, the device is one of the original Rebel cameras, probably a 350D, and given that they’ve been out for three years, it’s likely the owner would have had it cleaned or repaired in that time.”
This means, the owner could be identified from Canon’s service record if the camera was serviced by Canon even if the person did not send in the registration card right after purchase.
For honest law biding people like you, you may still be interested in viewing the EXIF information for learning purpose, or want to manipulate the EXIF data of your photos for some reasons (add comments, copyright notice, keywords, add EXIF to scanned photos, remove the manufacturer serial number for privacy concerns, etc). Here are a few free software that you can use: