AI Text Extractor (Optical Character Recognition)

Optical Character Recognition (OCR) running entirely inside your browser. Perfect for transcribing invoices, receipts, or contracts without any data leaks.

Note: On first use, the tool will download the language trained model (~15 MB) directly into your browser cache. All processing then remains entirely local on your device.

How to extract text from your images in 3 steps?

1

Select Document

Upload the scan, photo, or screenshot containing the text characters you want to copy.

2

Optical Recognition

Click to run the decentralized local artificial intelligence engine that processes the image line by line.

3

Copy Clipboard

View the extracted text directly in the text field and copy it instantly to use it anywhere.

Why choose a local browser-based OCR text extractor?

Transcribing physical or typed documents manually—such as purchase orders, invoices, commercial agreements, research reports, or official ID papers—is tedious and time-consuming. Utilizing Optical Character Recognition (OCR) allows you to turn visual files into searchable, copyable digital text strings in a second. However, sending these sensitive documents to standard cloud converters presents severe risks regarding information privacy and corporate security leaks.

Our online extractor integrates the high-performance `Tesseract.js` neural network library, operating in a completely sandbox architecture. During initialization, the application downloads the required localized linguistic files directly into your browser's private web storage cache. The heavy-lifting computation executes entirely in-memory on your CPU or GPU, ensuring full sovereign data containment and absolute offline structural operation capability.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the OCR tool read handwritten notes and scripts?

The language training dataset is fine-tuned to extract standard digital fonts and printed typeface text. It may encounter performance limitations with highly customized or uneven handwriting styles.

Are my extracted data streams or documents sent to third-party servers?

Absolutely no data packets ever leave your device. All reading and semantic mapping operations happen entirely inside the local runtime memory allocation of your browser window.

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