
Selective Image Guard is a lightweight WordPress plugin that adds multiple layers of protection to your website’s images. It’s ideal for photographers, designers, and content creators who want to deter theft and unauthorized use of their visual content.
The free version gives you solid protection against common image theft techniques:
The PRO version unlocks advanced and flexible controls for complete image protection:
This plugin provides a deterrent, not a foolproof solution. No client-side technique can offer 100% protection against a determined attacker.
But don’t underestimate the value of a deterrent.
Think about the methods used to keep mosquitoes away. Even if they don’t work 100%, would you rather be surrounded by hundreds of mosquitoes or just a couple? That’s the idea of a deterrent.
Here are several examples where you would want to display an image on a site but discourage people from sharing it:
Online course slides – You want students to see diagrams or infographics, but not download or redistribute them outside your platform.
Stock photography previews – You show high-resolution images to logged-in subscribers, but do not want those same images shared publicly without a license.
Members-only content – For example, fitness programs or meal plans with recipe cards as images, visible only to paying members.
Confidential documents – An internal portal where staff see charts or scanned reports, but you do not want them forwarded outside the company.
Product prototypes – Showing early design mockups (e.g. fashion sketches or unreleased product photos) to investors or testers, but preventing leaks to competitors.
Protection against unauthorized scraping – Preventing automated bots from copying images and republishing them without permission.
E-commerce product photos – Protecting your catalog from competitors scraping product images to use in their own stores.
Real estate listings – Preventing property photos from being scraped and reused on unauthorized portals.
Artistic portfolios – Protecting photographers, illustrators, and designers from having their portfolio images scraped and reused without attribution.
News and media outlets – Protecting journalistic images from being scraped and re-hosted by content farms.
Stock agencies – Protecting preview images (with or without watermarks) from being scraped in bulk to avoid licensing.
Recipe or DIY blogs – Protecting step-by-step photos from being scraped and republished elsewhere.
For more details about image protection and the limitations of client-side techniques, read the article: How to Protect Images on WordPress (And How to Prevent Theft)
Developed by Jose Mortellaro