A screenshot of a support ticket, CRM or inbox usually carries a real email address in plain sight. Auto-Redact recognizes any name@domain.tld token and blurs it in your browser, so the address never leaves your device.
Auto-Redact handles the email addresses automatically — and you cover anything else you want gone with a quick drag.
Auto-Redact matches any token shaped like name@domain.tld — sam.jones@acme.co, support+eu@company.io, first.last@sub.domain.com. If it reads as an email, it gets blurred in one pass.
A ticket or CRM row rarely shows an email alone. Phone numbers, payment card numbers, IBANs and API keys on the same screenshot are caught in the same pass.
Auto-Redact blurs the email token itself — customer@acme.com — and leaves the “Email:” label and the rest of the row readable, so the screenshot still makes sense.
Auto-Redact is a strong first pass, not a guarantee. An address that OCR misreads, is split oddly across a line, or is handwritten may be missed — drag a box over it yourself.
Paste a grab of your support ticket, CRM record, inbox or signup form from the clipboard, or drag the file in. Nothing is uploaded.
One click reads the image and blurs every email address it finds. Then drag a box over anything else — a name, a note — you want covered too.
Download a clean PNG, JPG or WEBP with the blur baked in — no hidden layer underneath to recover the address, up to 4x on Pro.
An email address is personal data. Post a support-ticket or CRM screenshot with a customer's address in it and you've leaked a real person's contact detail into a public thread — fair game for spam, phishing and scraping. Even your own inbox address, dropped into a bug report, invites unwanted mail. A grab forwarded to a group chat is exactly how that spreads.
Auto-Redact reads the image in your browser and blurs every name@domain.tld address it finds — the strongest case for the tool, because email is a single-word pattern it catches very reliably. Give the result a quick look, drag a box over anything OCR split oddly or missed, and every redaction is baked into the export with no hidden layer to peel back. Snapframe makes no compliance claim; it just keeps the image on your device.
On-device by design, permanent by default, and honest about what it is and isn't.
The image is read and blurred locally on your device — a grab of an inbox or support ticket is never uploaded to a server. There's nothing to leak in transit and nothing stored to delete.
The redaction is flattened into the exported image. There's no hidden original layer with the address still under it — unlike a black rectangle dropped on top in some editors that can be moved aside.
Snapframe makes no GDPR, HIPAA or other certification claim and this isn't legal advice. It simply helps you cover an email address before you send a screenshot to a coworker, forum or public thread.
The hub for Auto-Redact — emails, cards, IBANs, API keys and phone numbers, all in one pass.
Redaction hubDrag a box over a name, note or anything else — baked into the export, with no hidden layer.
Blur a screenshotBackgrounds, device frames, shadows, filters and batch export — all in one editor.
Screenshot toolFree, runs in your browser, no signup — your support ticket or inbox screenshot never leaves your device.