The correct answer is A. Creepy because the task is specifically about extracting and analyzing geolocation information (geotags) from publicly shared media and mapping that data to real-world locations to infer employee movement patterns. In CEH-aligned reconnaissance/OSINT workflows, geolocation intelligence is a common element of footprinting because it can reveal sensitive operational details such as office locations, travel routines, meeting venues, home addresses, and patterns of presence/absence. Tools designed for geolocation OSINT help testers identify whether staff are unintentionally exposing location metadata through social media posts, uploaded photos, or other public sources.
Creepy is purpose-built for geolocation reconnaissance: it collects location metadata associated with content and presents results in a way that supports mapping and timeline-style analysis, helping analysts correlate people, posts, and coordinates. This directly supports the goal of evaluating whether employees are disclosing sensitive information about office routines by publishing geotagged images. When used in an authorized assessment, such tooling helps demonstrate risk in a measurable way—for example, showing clusters of posts around a specific building, repeated visits at predictable times, or regular travel routes that could support surveillance, targeted social engineering, or physical intrusion planning.
Why the other options are less suitable: Social Searcher is primarily used for monitoring and searching social media content by keywords, usernames, hashtags, and mentions; it is useful for broad OSINT collection but is not specifically focused on geotag extraction and movement mapping. Sherlock is designed to find a username across many platforms, helping link identities, but it does not specialize in geolocation mapping. Maltego is a powerful link-analysis platform that can correlate entities (people, domains, emails, social profiles) and can support OSINT investigations, but for the narrow requirement of extracting and mapping geotagged location data from media, Creepy is the most direct and purpose-specific tool.
Therefore, the best tool for this geotagged image movement analysis task is Creepy.