Comments on: Digital cameras focus on revised reality
Consumers are embracing camera features that make them look thinner and more youthful. But what about society's trust in photography?![]()
Photos: Camera makeovers
Consumers are embracing camera features that make them look thinner and more youthful. But what about society's trust in photography?![]()
Photos: Camera makeovers
December 28, 2009 6:10 PM PST
December 28, 2009 6:00 PM PST
December 28, 2009 2:39 PM PST
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Come on, folks, grow up! Photos, unsolicited Internet e-mail, advertising and much of what the news media reports have been distorted forever! At least Jon Stewart has the nerve to admit it!
--mark d.
Good on him for reporting news while providing comedy and a beutiful comentary on mainstream disinformation services.
Come on, folks, grow up! Photos, unsolicited Internet e-mail, advertising and much of what the news media reports have been distorted forever! At least Jon Stewart has the nerve to admit it!
--mark d.
One possible solution Write Once Read Many (WORM) memory cards and MD5 checksums would aid investigators in proving the unfakedness of their evidence photos.
I am begging SONY for a GPS reciever in a camera and editing software that could read the EXIF GPS information, and pin each photo to GOOGLE EARTH.
Not taking it to serious though, perhaps
Reuter destroyed the idea completely, so now I come to the conclusion why not everybody jump on the waggon and deceive themself and others, perhaps everything is like a movie, lie back and enjoy, or leave the theater.
The fakes we should care about are the photojournalists, which we've heard of altering photos for dramatic effect. That's the kind of thing which is a step toward the inner party continuously rewriting history to suit their goals, and that's what I don't like happening. I don't know if skin toning or weight hiding features can accomplish this journalistic fraud, I suspect probably not, at least for now they'll need a laptop and some decent photo editing software there.
Only when cameras can copy portions of one photo into another, such as adding a person in one photo to another photo, will truely worrisome faking be done without the help of a computer.
cameras . People feel bad enough about them selfs, why does HP
need to feed to americas disorders. Thanks HP now maybe us fat
people out there will take more pictures of our selfs, and throw up
a little less. FU HP!
with or without edits; very nice :)
That's a hasty induction. Images don't appear more orderly just because they're monotone: Look at some Civil War battle-aftermath images for examples. Since North Americans up through the early 1960's (which I presume is the author's photographic reference culture) were crisply-pressed, snappy dressers, perhaps that's why B&W (and color) images show as much. Finally, most photo emulsions compress tonal values to some extent; B&W press emulsions do that by design, better matching the tonalities to those reproducible on newsprint. Off-white values get pushed towards white, and light-colored objects such as teeth teeth are represented as more white. That's necessary compromise in image reproduction, not lying. That most mid-20th century press images were exposed using flash units certainly contributed to the crisp appearance of those images, but that no more results in a lying image than the sun suddenly shining on a formerly overcast scene you're viewing and causing an increase in contrast.
- What's the old saying?...
- by GlennAl September 15, 2006 1:24 PM PDT
- the camera puts on 10 pounds? Well, not any more. (Of course, you can still make it do that, too.)
- Like this Reply to this comment
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