There is a built-in command on macOS called `SetFile`: ```none % SetFile Usage: SetFile [option...] file... -a attributes # attributes (lowercase = 0, uppercase = 1)* -c creator # file creator -d date # creation date (mm/dd/[yy]yy [hh:mm[:ss] [AM | PM]])* -m date # modification date (mm/dd/[yy]yy [hh:mm[:ss] [AM | PM]])* -P # perform action on symlink instead of following it -t type # file type ... ``` So you could run a short command line like: ```zsh while IFS=$'\t' read -r filename created do SetFile \ -d "$(date -jf "%m/%d/%Y %r" "$created" +"%D %T")" \ "$filename" done < mylist.tsv ``` The date format `%m/%d/%Y %r` is just what I guessed your format is, based on the `7/29/2017 4:47:23 PM` example in the question. And the default Created, Modified dates seem to be the only metadata about time stored in photos taken with iPhones (there is no "time taken" metadata). I checked all the metadata on the iPhone photo using `mdls` ```none mdls – lists the metadata attributes for the specified file ``` ``` mdls 13170030_982552864458_69609533_o_982552864458.jpg ``` would show you the metadata on your image.