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Blur Screenshot in Linux
Easily Blur Screenshots in Linux
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
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Frequently Asked Questions
Upload the screenshot to the online annotation tool in your browser. Use available annotation tools to mark and blur areas as needed. No additional software is required.
Yes, you can annotate images through your browser. Use tools like pen, text, highlighting, and shapes to add details to your screenshots.
No installation is needed. Everything works from your web browser, allowing seamless annotation without extra software.
The tool supports JPG, JPEG, PNG, and WEBP image formats. Upload these formats to start annotating and blurring screenshots.
While specific blur intensity customization isn't detailed, users can apply standard blurs using the annotation interface to conceal information.
The annotation tool focuses on image markup and doesn’t interact with Linux filesystem components like superblock pbs directly.
Yes, as long as you have a modern web browser, you can use the tool on various Linux distributions for image annotation.
Images must be under 100 MB in size. This ensures smooth processing and annotation.
You can annotate one file per session. After completion, start a new session for additional annotations.
You can use any modern web browser like Chrome, Firefox, or Safari on Linux for image annotation.
Yes, after annotating, you can download the image with all annotations embedded, ready for sharing or further use.
No, the tool is designed for use on desktop or laptop browsers. It's not optimized for mobile devices.
Existing text in images cannot be edited but can be annotated with additional text or shapes.
There are no real-time collaboration features at the moment. Annotations happen on a single-user basis per session.
No, the tool doesn't have OCR capabilities. It's designed for overlay annotations rather than text extraction.