terryMc
Loc: Arizona's White Mountains
Very interesting, Terry, thanks for sharing.
Great article. Thanks for the link. Most interesting is the onset of credentialing technologies and the extent to which the big players in the industry are buying in. This should go far toward defining and filtering the fake, and not eliminating it (it's not all bad, depending on context), but rather simply making it apparent.
billnikon
Loc: Pennsylvania/Ohio/Florida/Maui/Oregon/Vermont
terryMc wrote:
I know that there is a lot of interest here about ... (
show quote)
Photo's, on their own, are no longer excepted as fact in the courtroom.
billnikon wrote:
Photo's, on their own, are no longer excepted as fact in the courtroom.
I did some forensic photography years ago, in the film era, and even then I was required to testify that my photos were a true representation, or the attorneys had to stipulate that they were. Photographs have never been able to automatically be regarded as "true". Very early on in the history of photography photographers were adding or removing objects from photos, swapping skies, etc. in the darkroom. It's just much easier to do it now with digital.
I also wanted to add that photographs can be misleading or false without any darkroom or digital manipulation after they are taken. What is included or excluded from the composition, the angle the photo was taken, the timing of the exposure, wide angle or telephoto lens effects, the context of the photo, or staging photos can all effect the "truth" of a photographs.
JohnSwanda wrote:
I did some forensic photography years ago, in the film era, and even then I was required to testify that my photos were a true representation, or the attorneys had to stipulate that they were. Photographs have never been able to automatically be regarded as "true."...
Yes, photographs, on their own, have never been accepted in the courtroom. There will be an authority (the photographer or lawyer) who will testify that the photograph is a true and accurate likeness of the scene, object, person, etc. Many years ago, before he passed, a NYC police photographer friend told me of his experiences in the department doing mugshots and other forensic police work.
Be well! Ed
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