How can I upload pictures of interesting documents without doxing myself?

bliblblblbbllb

He is Risen
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Aug 19, 2022
I have aquired the facilitator's notes from the 2018 version of an anti-racism intensive retreat. I don't believe it's publically available in any way and so I'd like to archive it. I also think it includes a lot of just straight up cringe/funny shit worthy of mockery.

However, there are a lot of hand-written notes over it, mostly names of the participants that I don't want to leak. I could obviously censor them but I'm worried that someone can crank up the contrast and read the notes on the other side of the page THROUGH the back of the page. I'm not confident I can censor all of these occasions and it seems like it'd be hard to do because the handwriting on the backside of the page will run across multiple lines of text on the front.

I figure I could retype the whole thing but at that point I could be making up whatever.

What's the best way to go about this?
 
I figure I could retype the whole thing but at that point I could be making up whatever.
How important is this retreat? Are we talking Fortune 500 CEOs and/or important politicians, or something organized by your local college?

If it is the former, re-type and you can share with a mod/Null so they can confirm it is true without you having to publish it.

If it is the latter, just some funny anecdotes will do. We are just laughing at retards here, if you have a funny story people will not question it too much.
 
If you're worried about the text bleeding through the page on the opposite side, quick and dirty in Photoshop

> Open your file.
> Double click the layer thumbnail.
> Set the blend option for the layer to a lower value in the white.

As it goes to alpha, you could get a white page under it to check for unwanted leftover text
.JPG file doesn't use alpha channel so it'll go back to white once you're done. Just slip the white page under your current layer as you go.

Once you're done assuming you've got more than one page and more interesting to do than spend an afternoon saving individual layers.
> Files > Scripts > Export layers to files

kiwi1.jpg
 
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