When you edit files in different formats every day, the universality of the document tools matters a lot. If your tools work for only a few of the popular formats, you may find yourself switching between application windows to bind data in jpg and handle other document formats. If you want to eliminate the headache of document editing, go for a platform that can easily manage any extension.
With DocHub, you do not need to concentrate on anything but actual document editing. You won’t have to juggle programs to work with different formats. It can help you edit your jpg as easily as any other extension. Create jpg documents, modify, and share them in one online editing platform that saves you time and improves your productivity. All you have to do is sign up an account at DocHub, which takes only a few minutes or so.
You won’t have to become an editing multitasker with DocHub. Its functionality is sufficient for speedy papers editing, regardless of the format you need to revise. Start by registering an account and see how effortless document management might be having a tool designed specifically to suit your needs.
[Music] what is going on guys welcome back in today's video we're going to learn how to hide information inside of jpeg files and this goes beyond basic stuff like strings numbers or any other primitive data types we're going to be able to hide fully executable programs inside of jpeg files without changing the image without changing anything about the image functionality it's still a normal photo it's still a normal jpeg file but it has some information in it that we can then also extract again and in order to show you how you can do that we're going to use this image here so this is a basic jpeg file an image of a woman taking a picture with a camera and all that uh you can see the extension here is jpeg literally every jpeg file that is a normal jpeg file will work for this so you don't have to pick a special one um and we're going to look at the bytes of the jpeg file in order to see why we can do that and how we can do that now in order to look at the bytes we're not going to use...