I have tested out more than one free PDF editor when I did not have Acrobat available. BentoPDF an online PDF editor, is the best of the bunch, and it includes many functions Acrobat users will be familiar with.

Some of the functions do not allow you to process multiple PDF files.

It does however include a Bates stamp tool which can apply Bates numbers to multiple PDFs.

There is no option in the 'Bates padding' field to apply stamps with leading zeros for numbers greater than six digits, but this limitation is easily overcome by adding zeros in the 'Customize Style' field which uses the identifier [BATES] for the starting number you select for the production. The only available fonts are Times New Roman, Courier, and Helvetica

As always, I'm testing the solutions I'm posting about with real data and can confirm that Bento gave results as promised.

It has an effective redaction tool which can be used with one PDF at a time, but does give you a way to select text to be redacted before those redactions are applied.

Tests confirm that Bento can convert multiple Word documents to PDFs, and it includes options to convert Excel, PowerPoint, JPEGs, and other formats.
Sadly, it will not OCR multiple PDF files.
Its tool to extract information from charts included in PDF files won't be making me abandon Abbyy FineReader's far superior tool, but it gives usable results. From this PDF:

. . . it extracted this data to a .csv file.

BentoPDF's promotional materials tout its rigorous privacy policy which ensures users that their PDFs will remain in their browsers.

However, you should note that it does offer a commercial version for a $79 fee which allows for it to be used in an application without disclosing the source code of the application.
















