Have you ever stored an picture from the web and found it appeared with a .jfif suffix rather than the standard .jpg, this is common. JFIF — meaning JPEG File Interchange Format — is a standard defining the way JPEG photos is stored.
Simply put, a JFIF image is a JPEG file. The .jfif file type shows up mainly after saving photos from specific browsers, particularly if the image was served without a proper MIME type.
JFIF files started showing to regular users because some older browsers — especially older versions of Microsoft Edge — store JPEG files with the correct .jfif file extension when the server omits the filename.
Fixing this is straightforward: simply rename the file extension from .jfif to .jpg, or process it with a converter tool to produce a correctly named JPG image. Either way, the photo content stays the same.
The simplest approach is a simple rename. On Windows, activate file extension visibility in File read more Explorer, click the .jfif image, select Rename and modify the extension to .jpg.
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