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Samsung says ALL photos are fake

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After Samsung's Fake Moon debacle, Samsung's head of consumer experience says, "There is no real picture, full stop". Tony and Chelsea dig into the fake moon controversy, the ways photos have been faked and edited over time, and if there's any truth to all photos being faked.
0:00 Introduction
3:43 🌕 Samsung faking moon photos with AI
7:27 ⚙️ Emergence of content authenticity software
11:15 📷 Photography manipulation history reveals the extent of deceit in images, impacting careers and perceptions
14:44 ⚖️ Discussion on ethical considerations when digitally altering images to overcome camera limitations
18:48 ⚠️ Ethical dilemma of misrepresenting staged photos as real to convey a compelling narrative
22:14 📸 Misrepresentation of cultures through selective photography in media
25:58 📸 Photographers must allow subjects to control the narrative
30:15 📸 Challenges of verifying authenticity in photos and the idea of adding context for clarity

Пікірлер: 466

  • @TonyAndChelsea
    @TonyAndChelsea5 ай бұрын

    NEW YEAR, NEW YOU! Go to squarespace.com/Chelsea & save 10% off your first website or domain with code “Chelsea"

  • @PeterDuke
    @PeterDuke5 ай бұрын

    "All photographs are accurate, none of them the truth" ~ Richard Avedon

  • @TheodoreSchnell
    @TheodoreSchnell5 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed your discussion. I was a journalist for 30+ years, the first seven of which I also was a photojournalist. The ethical questions you pose were real even back in the mid- to late 1980s when I stepped into my career. I always had difficulty accepting environmental portraits, for example, that were set up. They were planned to create an effect, and I always thought they should be labeled photo illustrations simply because of that. Later, as an editor, I often surprised photographers with the types of questions I asked, specifically because of some of the concerns you both discussed here. There is, I think, a vast difference between editing a photo for clarity -- to reveal detail that might be obscured in shadow, for example, which I would argue to absolutely acceptable -- and editing to create an effect or mood. The latter, in my opinion, is when the photographer steps out of the realm of photojournalism and into the realm of illustration. Both can be tools in journalism, but I think illustrations need to be clearly labeled as such in order to be honest with the readers/viewers. Sine elements of AI can be honest photographic tools when it is used with integrity. I'm thinking specifically of AI software than can sharpen an image, or remove noise. But when it is used to manufacture something that is not real, then it should be identified clearly as an illustration. Thanks again for posting this discussion! You both rock!

  • @JohnnyArtPavlou

    @JohnnyArtPavlou

    5 ай бұрын

    Remember the whole kerfuffle about the Matt Mahurin photo/illustration of O.J. Simpson for Time magazine.

  • @joepiekl
    @joepiekl5 ай бұрын

    This sounds like someone getting caught stealing and saying "Well technically, the concept of private property isn't real."

  • @anonymous36247

    @anonymous36247

    5 ай бұрын

    Private property IS a crappy concept. Personal property is fine but private property should be abolished.

  • @CanadaBlue85

    @CanadaBlue85

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@MikeHunt4hire You're right. I'll come by and take all "your" stuff soon....😂

  • @CanadaBlue85

    @CanadaBlue85

    5 ай бұрын

    @@MikeHunt4hire my address is.... Canada🤣

  • @PJ-om2wq

    @PJ-om2wq

    5 ай бұрын

    You just described communism.

  • @ladyethyme

    @ladyethyme

    5 ай бұрын

    My thoughts exactly

  • @Akiidan
    @Akiidan5 ай бұрын

    The first thing taught in my History of Photography class at my Uni is never to trust any photo. We saw hundreds of examples of doctored and stagged photos during WW1 and WW2, even some from the Civil War.

  • @bondgabebond4907

    @bondgabebond4907

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, and the Soviets were masters of picture manipulation. One day you are in a picture within a group, next day you never existed.

  • @CJ-Photo
    @CJ-Photo5 ай бұрын

    I personally think that if you are adding something to the photo that wasn't there at the moment you took the photo (or if you missed the item in the photo and add it later with AI), you need to disclose. I'm so sick of looking at these photos online and wondering if they are real or not. I want people to disclose if the photo was altered beyond basic editing and cropping - mainly meaning items added but also items removed.

  • @Topgunphoto

    @Topgunphoto

    5 ай бұрын

    totally agree, I feel like I'm questioning more and more pics because they just look too over done.

  • @parkerea

    @parkerea

    5 ай бұрын

    One of the biggest obstacles is trying to identify when a "significant" edit is made, because that implies judgment. An edit that is significant to one person, in one context, may be completely irrelevant in another. Even something as basic and otherwise acceptable as cropping could exclude extremely relevant information in photojournalism. It's all about the context.

  • @unstanic

    @unstanic

    5 ай бұрын

    @@parkereayup. But you could make the argument you could have taken the same image without cropping (reframing, zooming, etc). But of course what about changing Colors? Aren’t those considered removing something and adding something new? What about masked editing?

  • @michaelt1103

    @michaelt1103

    5 ай бұрын

    I determine it based upon the type of photo. I have artistic/abstract photos where I will blow out the saturation to where it no longer looks the same, but haven't added anything that wasn't there. If I do a landscape I try to make it look as much like I remember it as possible, as I feel like blowing out a sunset or sunrise sky and comping that over more naturally lit mountains is deceptive unless you somehow indicate you did it.

  • @CJ-Photo

    @CJ-Photo

    5 ай бұрын

    @@michaelt1103 for sure. I was thinking of wildlife/landscape that are intended to represent actual wildlife and locations. I think it's great to be creative with photos. So yes, I think it does depend on the type of photo and intention.

  • @orkidochcies8785
    @orkidochcies87855 ай бұрын

    When I was in school for photography I had to videotape all the taking of my images because the teachers thought they were photoshopped. Eventually they realized that everything I did was not photoshopped I just like to take unusual shots and did unusual images, but I was also really good at using Photoshop

  • @SurLife
    @SurLife5 ай бұрын

    As a landscape photographer I'm seeing the trend on social media that the general public assumes the fantastic AI images with double rainbows, lightning bolts, fantastic shaped clouds are real. I'm amazed how many thousands of folks praise the photographer for the great work...

  • @lyfandeth
    @lyfandeth5 ай бұрын

    Decades ago the father of Polaroid, Edmund Land, remarked that if a photograph wasn't a Polariod, there was no way to be sure it hadn't been altered. Photo manipulation, retouching, compositing...all used to take lots of skill before pixel level editing became possible.

  • @terrygoyan3022
    @terrygoyan30225 ай бұрын

    I felt the same way when Photoshop first became a thing. Even shooting film I always tried to choose the best emulsion to get the results I wanted. Photography will always be an interpretation of reality. My beef is adding elements that were not captured in the original photo. That is NOT a photograph, it's a photo based unreality.

  • @yogtheterrible
    @yogtheterrible5 ай бұрын

    Another famous instance of staging was the nature film by Disney about lemmings. For decades people thought when lemmings get overpopulated a few run off a cliff and the rest just follow. Being a "lemming" became known as someone who blindly follows the crowd. There's even a series of video games about this. But it came out later that the filmmakers were chasing the lemmings off the cliff in order to get a good shot. Lemmings DO have booms in population but they don't jump off a cliff, groups migrate to a new area and inevitably a few fall into the ocean and die but it's nothing like what was portrayed and what entered the public mind.

  • @teamgreatnessmedia7257

    @teamgreatnessmedia7257

    5 ай бұрын

    I've seen nature films debunked a few times. Most of the stuff we see is manipulated for entertainment purposes. It's crazy what they hide from us.

  • @youngThrashbarg
    @youngThrashbarg5 ай бұрын

    Is this a photo? -No this is Patrick.

  • @davidward1224
    @davidward12245 ай бұрын

    This is an interesting conversation for photographers to have. Two things are important, in my view. A) a photograph is an instant in time of a visual scene with boundaries. That applies to any photography made with any device. the luminance and color data collected in digital form is then used by software, either in the camera (JPG) or via editing software externally (Photoshop et al) to create a representation of that visual instant in time, with boundaries.) The ONLY person who knows the accuracy of the representation is the photographer that pressed the shutter release. All the rest of us are relying on their statements to determine its visual validity. Which leads to B. When a photographer is making an image to document the bounded instant in time they have legal and ethical responsibilities. When the photographer is making an image as the beginning point of a creative expression they have no legal or ethical obligations beyond their creative intent. For example, when photographing a house for a realtor, there are rules and laws that govern what is acceptable as a reasonable representation of the property at the time it's being sold. On the other hand a photographer making a picture of the same property for creative purposes is not constrained by those rules and laws. As a young commercial photographer I was hired by an attorney to make pictures of the site and environment in a store where their client had been injured. Even though the pictures were made on film and then printed on paper, I was required to appear in court, with the negatives and prints to testify that I had made the pictures and they were an accurate representation of the location. I expect something similar has to be done today, even with digital cameras. At the end of the day, it's the photographer determining real or contrived. AI is just another tool available to interpret our creative intent.

  • @brianmckeever5280
    @brianmckeever52805 ай бұрын

    We should also be very grateful that we live lives that allow us the luxury of debates like this.

  • @ulyssesnathanialowen3831

    @ulyssesnathanialowen3831

    5 ай бұрын

    bored with woke nonsense

  • @brianmckeever5280

    @brianmckeever5280

    5 ай бұрын

    I was commenting on the comedic angst they were showing. I recently lost a friend of 35 years to cancer, and just thought a reminder that this may not be as critical as some may feel would be out of place, offensive or boring. I stand corrected.@@ulyssesnathanialowen3831

  • @JESUSISCALLINGYOU7

    @JESUSISCALLINGYOU7

    5 ай бұрын

    Love that!

  • @williamflynn4954
    @williamflynn49545 ай бұрын

    Great Discussion! I think it gets complicated quickly and on many different levels. 1) If I correct geometric distortion from a wide angle lens image am I "faking" it or making it more real? The same can be said for chromatic aberration, high ISO noise, poor metering choice, etc., etc. 2) Tony touched on this, and I concur that often I'll make adjustments to an image to make it closer to what the scene ACTUALLY looked like than what the camera captured. 3) I'm pretty sure that painters who were commissioned to produce portraits of their clients 500 years ago, were taking liberties to flatter their benefactors. It was even know back then as A.I. (Artists Income).

  • @mynameisben123

    @mynameisben123

    5 ай бұрын

    In my view it’s pretty simple, correcting lens aberrations, especially distortion and CA, using considered faking anything. Whereas adding a composite element that wasn’t there is faking it. There is a grey area in the middle but the extremes are pretty obvious , to me at least.

  • @charlestownsendfilms
    @charlestownsendfilms5 ай бұрын

    I worked hi-rise construction when I was younger, and I did often eat sitting on I-Beams or with my legs dangling off the side. First day on the job I climbed up 24 stories without a safety or tether. The i-beam photo may be fake, but we really did the stuff just like that.

  • @RogerZoul
    @RogerZoul5 ай бұрын

    These issues are very complex and difficult to sort out. Just the other day and turned my nose up at someone who put an obvious fake background behind some flying ducks in a social media post. During this podcast, I thought of the times I have done some serious editing on a animal photo to make the background less distracting. Using the remove tool in Photoshop, and a few other techniques, one can really change the entire feeling/mood in a simple bird photo. Now I feel bad for how I thought about what the other photographer did. Fortunately for me, I didn't go as far as to actually make a negative comment in response to the other photographer...I just moved on. The picture the other photography posted was actually more enjoyable than just a friggin blue sky would have been, so that is a plus, and it was actually the same motivation I had for changing my background. Do you really need to disclose this information for a simple social media post? I'm not making any money, I don't think the other photographer was making any money, and our viewers had something enjoyable to look at as they got through their days. Yet, in the moment, part of me felt like the other person was somehow cheating, while I didn't bother to look at myself in the mirror. Not good.

  • @anonymous36247
    @anonymous362475 ай бұрын

    There's perhaps play no way to capture the totality of a person's life with a single frame but that's very different from the idea of intentionally spreading misinformation or propaganda. When you're creating an image of people working on a skyscraper in order to bolster the national spirit in the wake of a construction boom or when you're trying to make someone feel a certain way about poverty by portraying it with fake images you can do real damage. It only flashed on the screen for a moment but apparently the Afghan girl was jailed and everyone in the West only new false information about her. National Geographic may not have told us the everything about her or the war but they certainly could have done a better job if they were intentionally lying and ruined her life. That's the difference between whether or not there's a real picture or not. Real pictures don't have to be 100% a reflection of the totality of the universe that the subject inhabits, but they cannot contain intentional lying meant to spread false narratives or harm people.

  • @elmerhochstetler9410

    @elmerhochstetler9410

    5 ай бұрын

    Agree 100% People should also view pictures with "some" skepticism and assume there might be some perspective trickery going on at least. Regarding "The Beam" Having a construction backbround, I wasn't as "overawed" as some . . . I just thought it was a cool photo.

  • @Atis602
    @Atis6025 ай бұрын

    I've been watching a guy on KZread who goes into deep analysis of musical performances and the use of auto tuning and pitch correction and it's very interesting to see how closely this discussion parallels that debate. It's surprising how many world renowned vocalists use these technologies either by choice or forced by the studios. He even disclosed the use of these methods during broadcasts of talent programs!

  • @atkira

    @atkira

    5 ай бұрын

    His name is Fil, but he works under "Wings of Pegasus". His work is very relevant to this discussion. He's covered many recording artists. He electronically isolates out their vocals and shows the waveforms of the notes they're hitting. His studies of Billy Joel at the Grammys, Karen Carpenter's live and studio vocals and Roy Orbison singing Walk On are good examples of how AI'ing performances diminishes them.

  • @atkira

    @atkira

    5 ай бұрын

    There's also a very long but very good article in the Feb 5, 2024 "New Yorker" magazine on how the executive level of the music business is coping with AI called: "The Next Scene - Lucian Grainge helped the music industry survive file-sharing. Now he wants to do the same with A.I."

  • @malenky4057
    @malenky40575 ай бұрын

    Interesting discussion and I don't really have any answers for the most part. I do think that the Samsung situation is a pretty clear cut line though, they misrepresented the capability of their camera, because it wasn't telling us it can create sharp moon pictures, it was telling us it can zoom in to a distance as far as the moon and get sharp pictures. It implied you could use this functionality on any zoomed image.

  • @trueatfalse
    @trueatfalse5 ай бұрын

    I pretty clearly draw the line by adding any objects into an image that were not there, while removing things like a small part of a window leaking into the image or removing a pencil in the corner of the floor is fine for me. Mostly like you'd clean up someone's face in a portrait to just show how a scene would have ideally looked. This way, I don't feel like making something up that wasn't there, but only removing something annoying that was there by extending something that was there. If you remove a piece of trash from the floor by just replacing it with more of the existing floor, it's just different from putting a whole new teddy bear on that floor.

  • @wincoffin7985
    @wincoffin79855 ай бұрын

    I In the first few minutes, where you talk about Samsung's premise that photos are all 'fake', I wanted to add another perspective ... Think about images taken by space telescopes (Hubble, JWST, etc). My understanding is that these images are composed of layers, each taken in monochrome but using specific filters, then each is assigned a color, and finally composited together. The results are certainly beautiful, but nothing the human eye would ever see. Do we questions whether they're real? Not really.

  • @TimeToCheckReality

    @TimeToCheckReality

    3 ай бұрын

    they are not adding things that were not there other than color. Some of the color is because the actual "color" is not visible to the human eye.

  • @srmrlr
    @srmrlr5 ай бұрын

    I'm a retired Navy Photographer, retired 23 years ago. I got into Digital in 94, and immediately we saw it abused. As photographers, we had service record entries noting we would NOT manipulate imagery, as our PRIMARY job was documentation. Even in portraits, we weren't supposed to alter or remove blemishes, as even official portraits were regarded as legal documentation. In fact, Marine promotion board images that appeared to be manipulated would be disqualified. But when we did work that was purely artistic, we frequently had to disclose we had made manipulations. (I much preferred Aldus Photostyler to early Photoshop, though!!!) That said, nobody ever really thought much about darkroom manipulations, dodging, burnings, exposure correction color correction... I honestly can I don't miss the smell of the chemistry, but kind miss the magic of watching the print appear in the soup... All that said, one of the first lessons at Navy Photoschool included how much photography can lie, how much can you do to an image before nobody trusts it anymore...

  • @JESUSISCALLINGYOU7

    @JESUSISCALLINGYOU7

    5 ай бұрын

    That's a cool story. You've been at this pretty much since the beginning!

  • @TheSmartWoodshop
    @TheSmartWoodshop5 ай бұрын

    "When I post a black and white photo, do I need to provide a disclaimer that the scene was actually in color? If I choose a wide aperture, should I disclose that the background wasn't actually out of focus? 🤣

  • @jackbeltane
    @jackbeltane5 ай бұрын

    I took a photo 8 years ago of a seaplane driving down the road outside of my house. Everyone trolls especially went wild accusing me of Photoshop. It was straight from the camera, one end of the road is a Marina and other end is the airfield. Nothing photoshopped or AI but it is amazing how quickly people troll unique photos

  • @smaakjeks
    @smaakjeks5 ай бұрын

    My thoughts: Comptetitions have their own rules, so I won't dwell on that. Generally we just don't want to feel tricked. But, our brain works very differently from how a camera works. When you're out watching stuff, your brain has to process a lot of info, and some of it just isn't that important from moment to moment and so your brain discards it. In a landscape there could be a soda can in a bush that you don't notice at all among the myriad of impressions and experiences of viewing a scene. But capture it in a photo, and it's there forever as part of the landscape. It will get noticed eventually. And, sure, that can really was there, and to edit it out is to change how the landscape looked at that precise moment and angle. However, if you walk for 20 miles through nature and there is only one can, a single photo showing that can would misrepresent the rest of that landscape for what it was. We simply observe things differently in real life compared to in a photo. The photo is, in my mind, supposed to recreate, in a fleeting moment, a generalised impression of reality as we live it. This is the case especially when it comes to how we see other people. Our brain is hardwired to hyperfocus on faces, because faces are important to us. So when we see a person in real life our brain focuses on changes in tone, mannerisms, expressions etc. and filters out unimportant things. We would struggle in social situations if our brain tried to take in all information available. Whereas the camera captures everything in one instance that can be scrutinised forever. Every blemish, stray hair, etc. When we LOOK at a person, we hardly ever notice these things unless we make a conscious effort to do so. So, to replicate how a someone looks to us in person, ironically, editing away the distractions makes sense. Or let me put it this way: There won't ALWAYS be a stray hair on the head of a person you know. There won't ALWAYS be some fluff on their shirt. You see them in poor light, in good light, freshly shaven and scruffy, with make-up and without, etc. You know what they look like despite these changes. The visage underlying the daily changes. A single photo can't get a "fair" impression of a person as we see them day-to-day. So, we remove the peculiarities of that moment.

  • @Tarets

    @Tarets

    5 ай бұрын

    Exactly. The argument about our faces is also why often they feel so weird when captured. You freeze a split second's tiny grimace that completely differs from what you actually notice and memorize with your brain. Photography has been a proxy of reality since it was invented.

  • @kategage2159

    @kategage2159

    5 ай бұрын

    Very well said.

  • @orxanr5955
    @orxanr59555 ай бұрын

    Pretty much every smartphone distorts faces to make them more "favorable". At the very least they remove imperfections on skin.

  • @shmvon

    @shmvon

    5 ай бұрын

    I don't like it

  • @davep6603
    @davep66035 ай бұрын

    I mostly shoot landscapes, and have no problem removing an object (power lines, trash cans, even people) but I would not add content (e.g., sky swap) without disclosing it. I would consider using generative expand and think that should be disclosed but, as Tony mentioned, how do you do that without people thinking the whole image is generated?

  • @MuffFlux
    @MuffFlux5 ай бұрын

    I think the bigger problem is that every photo you take (or are about to take) is checked by Samsung to determine you are taking a photo/have taken a photo of the moon... Rather than the moon being fake.

  • @MarttiSuomivuori

    @MarttiSuomivuori

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Now I understand why Tarkovski sculpted the light with Polaroid. (He had a book "Sculpting with light")

  • @arleighbarley
    @arleighbarley5 ай бұрын

    When I was a darkroom / analog photographer, I used to show the black outer edge of my photo to “flex” that I composed my shot in the camera, not in the darkroom. Now, when I compose the digital photo as I take it, there’s no way for me to show it to viewers the way I used to show the black darkroom frame.

  • @ivanbuckingham2302
    @ivanbuckingham23025 ай бұрын

    I want AI to turn my wife into Margo Robbie every time I take a double selfie 😂

  • @JohnnyArtPavlou

    @JohnnyArtPavlou

    5 ай бұрын

    Very sad

  • @clairehachey2189
    @clairehachey21895 ай бұрын

    I only use Photoshop Elements along with Topaz DeNoise AI to do minor adjustments to my bird photography. Shooting at 30fps with my Canon R7 permits me to get enough photos so I don't have much editing to do with the best ones. I don't like to over edit. Thanks for another amazing video Chelsea & Tony. Cheers from Montreal, Canada :)

  • @cnkaufmann
    @cnkaufmann5 ай бұрын

    Wow! You two do such a comprehensive job of expounding on an important subject in photography that it really opens my eyes to the social and political impact photography has on people. I thought little of the fake photo I did in high school of putting my brother on top of a Coke can in 1980 doing a double exposure on film with a Nikon F2. But, ethics are questioned when altered photos are published in the media and millions of people are influenced. Well done. Thank you

  • @TonyAndChelsea

    @TonyAndChelsea

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @bubbles581
    @bubbles5815 ай бұрын

    There is always going to be AT LEAST demosaicing done otherwise all our photos would be green. Programs like lightroom do that silently in the background but more advanced raw image processing software lets you turn it off or change the algorithm used. Because of this i tell people all the time there is no such thing as an unedited photo.

  • @RamsesTheFourth
    @RamsesTheFourth5 ай бұрын

    The most vivid distinction would be if all photographs would include the raw file. So you could see the edit version and if you want you can see the original as well and compare them. Then you dont really have to manually explain all edits if you dont want to. The viewer can just see it. I am aware that there would be programs that would allow to edit the raw file as well so both would be fake but at least there would be something for the masses.

  • @jeroenschoondergang5923
    @jeroenschoondergang59235 ай бұрын

    "How much editing did you do on this image?" "Just enough to crash my laptop"

  • @f8surf
    @f8surf5 ай бұрын

    One of your best, thoughtful, and excellent youtube videos. Thank you for being Real.

  • @darylcheshire1618
    @darylcheshire16185 ай бұрын

    So you get a stock photo that you don’t own?

  • @MargaretHarmer
    @MargaretHarmer5 ай бұрын

    I think this video is vital on calling out all the fake advertisement. There are probably so many lies to uncover. Thank you!

  • @lauras.2706
    @lauras.27065 ай бұрын

    I agree with everything you're saying.........I will take elements out (garbage cans etc) but won't put things in. Dodge, burn, sharpen, denoise overcomes the limitations of the camera, makes total sense. Also adding a "wing tip" to me is fine if it's a small element and would have been there otherwise.

  • @theresidentchef
    @theresidentchef5 ай бұрын

    I've never heard you both discuss your thoughts on Vivian Maier. As you probably know, she was the woman whose (truly amazing) pictures were discovered after she died. She was not famous for her ability until after her death. This brings up a topic that I am constantly thinking about and that is the effect of others seeing your work and how that effects how you take future pictures. I really love your show and I especially like the somewhat existential questions (like the ones discussed in this episode) that you present to the community. Thanks! - Bryant

  • @RangeRoninChronicles
    @RangeRoninChronicles5 ай бұрын

    According to English Language & Usage: Picture: An individual painting, drawing, or other representation on a surface, of an object or objects; esp. such a representation as a work of art. (Now the prevailing sense.) Image: An optical appearance or counterpart of an object, such as is produced by rays of light either reflected as from a mirror, refracted as through a lens, or falling on a surface after passing through a small aperture. Such an appearance may also be a mere subjective impression on the sense of sight, as an after-image (q.v.), and the negative image or accidental image seen after looking intently at a bright-coloured object, and having a colour complementary to that of the object. An image produced by reflexion or refraction is called in Optics a real image when the rays from each point of the object actually meet at a point, a virtual image when they diverge as if from a point beyond the reflecting or refracting body.

  • @JimD750
    @JimD7505 ай бұрын

    I have taken multiple shots and merged them together many times. I do this to make a narrow image wider. Having said that, on 2 seperate occasions I merged photos of flying birds. One was a flock of geese that became 3 flocks of geese. On another occasion one buzzard became 4 buzzards. I have absolutely no idea how those pictures turned out like that. I'd love to pat myself on the back for my ingenuity, but both sets of pictures were total accidents.

  • @larswillsen
    @larswillsen5 ай бұрын

    "Any static image was yesterday, today is another day" (Lars Willsen) ... relax people, take a deep breath :)

  • @AbdonPhirathon
    @AbdonPhirathon5 ай бұрын

    Photos are an approximation of what we saw when we took a photo, not an accurate representation of what your eyes saw. Lenses capture aberrations, distortions, transmit color casts, and then go through a bayer sensor that have to go through a debayering process to make up data that wasn’t even there to begin with because it can’t capture all of the color information in one pixel. You then edit them in a RAW Processing software that will interpret and demosaic those files differently. By the time you share those images out on social media, it’s not “what you saw”. Shooting on film? The moment you invert a negative you have essentially edited it and it was also not what you captured. Slide film? Chromes have color casts too. Take it a step further if you print. What printer was used? Which inks, dye or pigment? How many inks, 4 or 12? What papers did you use, photo or “fine art”? So yes, photos technically aren’t real. Patrick wasn’t lying here. Although, I do agree that Samsung should have disclosed the fake moon popping up in people’s photos.

  • @RustyBrownPhotography
    @RustyBrownPhotography5 ай бұрын

    I'm embracing the features of generative AI. At a recent shoot, I covered a beat-up table with a big swatch of fabric. In post, I saw just how wrinkled the fabric was. I drew around it with the lasso tool, and typed in "smooth table cloth". The first set of options had a great table cloth - but it changed the color and I liked it. Done. Mind you, I'm a hobbyist who loves photography. I do consider it my art form. In my portraiture work, I have used freq separation for years, without reservation. I guess I haven't used AI in a way that's caused me to question it ... yet. Good topic -- oh yea, BTW, this is the 2nd video (I think) that you've referenced Marques Brownlee. Please note, the pronounciation of his first name is "Mark-Ezz". It's not Mark-Eese. Cheers!

  • @captinktm
    @captinktm5 ай бұрын

    Love it. There is only one way to know if information or a photo is fake, we used to use this method many years ago. They were called books and were found in a library. The books we trusted were written by authors that we trusted or were recommended by other trusted people like the librarian and teachers (like yourselves) . When I see a dodgy image I check out the poste (is that a word?) that is normally enough to confirm if the image is real. Folk that follow me know I don't fake my images for several reasons. They follow my story and travels and know I am trustworthy. I don't know you guys personally but I have your books, and follow your chanel, from this I trust your opinions and know you are a trusted source because what you write and say WORKS. This not only applies to photos and photography but everything on the internet, if you don't know and trust the source why believe it? Are my images real? of course they are. They maybe a little brighter or a bit more vibrant but the scene or animal was there. Check out the Otter photo I sent you for Thursday it's very very real!! Thanks for posting another fantastic video.

  • @STrentGlobalStudios
    @STrentGlobalStudios5 ай бұрын

    Even the original film negatives that I was fortunate enough to see in person from the first days of photography when there was glass negatives instead of film, these images were still either manipulated in some fashion or areas etched out to erase or hide certain elements of the image. So even to the first true photographs there is no such thing as an absolute real factual image that is not a direct interpretation by the photographer in some fashion or another. Even Ansel Adam’s used the darkroom to manipulate the negative to draw the image he saw in his mind out of the negatives that he was able to expose. Because sometimes there is not enough time to capture the image on the negatives the way you want or that even if the exposure is perfect, the image is not what you either saw or have constructed in your mind’s eye to create to present as the final image. From a graduate of the Ringling School of Art and Design with a BFA in Photography and Digital Imaging.

  • @mendelsphotography
    @mendelsphotography5 ай бұрын

    Pretty interesting thoughts here and thanks for sharing as always.

  • @careylymanjones
    @careylymanjones5 ай бұрын

    "There is no real picture, full stop." There is no real cell phone picture, full stop. Fixed it for you. Cell phone cameras spindle, fold, and mutilate images to the point where FOR CELL PHONE PICTURES, there ARE no real pictures. Which is one of the many reasons I'm not a fan of cell phone cameras.

  • @charlescarlson1290
    @charlescarlson12905 ай бұрын

    Well, I believe you answered your own question at 2:41 into the video. It is in fact true that everything we experience is a sensory representation of the world, and the sensory projections go both ways into and out of our brains. We spend a great deal of time learning and confirming these representations. What's disturbing is the thought that someone or something might manipulate the sensory representation to provide a better equivalency to the real thing, one close enough to be the real thing. Alas, the great fear of AI!! It may corrupt the very nature of trust in our sensors.

  • @donstravelsandrants.
    @donstravelsandrants.5 ай бұрын

    Another great, and interesting podcast. 👍😊💙🇮🇪🇺🇸

  • @rreichar1
    @rreichar15 ай бұрын

    Great discussion! This was very thought provoking. I can’t say that for a lot of content I watch on KZread.

  • @clausgiloi6036
    @clausgiloi60365 ай бұрын

    Great video, would love to see more content like this.

  • @nedkelly2035
    @nedkelly20353 ай бұрын

    Point of interest- the older Hasselblad cameras in 120/220 format had two notches in the film aperture, which could be seen beyond the edge of the frame in any image that was contact printed or printed including the edge information (film type, frame number). Bronica used Hasselblad/Zeiss images in some of their ads, easy to tell due to the notches. But apparently Zenza-Bronica people did not realize it or thought no one else would. Of course if you had the negative or transparency in your hand, you could tell 100% of the time if it was a Hasselblad image. Anyway, in some ways this goes back further than digital.

  • @OpenDGuitar
    @OpenDGuitar5 ай бұрын

    Valuable conversation! I posed the question to my students - is AI artificial, and is it intelligent? Or is it just advanced tools? Cropping, adjusting color balance…I don’t mention that. I have cleaned up blemishes. Prepping backgrounds for video, I sometimes fill or delete items, but those changes aren’t the focus of the image. Things I do that are noticeable, or that matter how you present the work, I mention the techniques used.

  • @RetroPhotoPro
    @RetroPhotoPro5 ай бұрын

    Since this started I have been asked no less than 10 times if a photo I took was fake. 😢

  • @RichardLiloc
    @RichardLiloc5 ай бұрын

    Instead of apologizing and making things better, the guy just gaslighted a lot of photographers. Such BS of a guy.

  • @wildbillgreen
    @wildbillgreen5 ай бұрын

    Film gets the closest to something “real”

  • @AbdonPhirathon

    @AbdonPhirathon

    5 ай бұрын

    Not even close. Color Negative needs converting, and the moment you do that you have essentially created an interpretation of what the film saw. The inversion process can be done in multiple ways, each inversion giving different color results, and a different interpretation of the film. B&W film? We see in color, so not what you saw either. Slide film? All chromes have color casts that are characteristic of the film stock used. For example, Blue Ektachrome, Purple Provia, Orange Velvia, take your pic, none of them real.

  • @glennn.3464
    @glennn.34645 ай бұрын

    As I watch more and more YT videos on photography and photo editing I can’t help but think how far photographers are getting from actual photography. Many of the comments say something like how this ot that person’s photo editing techniques has made them better photographers. REALLY? The photographer starts with a basic photo that is not very special. They often say how it’s not very good and lacks this or that quality and they then proceed to edit the photo to the point of NOT being closer to what he/she ACTUALLY WITNESSED and captured but to some extreme difference that was digitally altered to be what the photographer wished they had captured under those perfect circumstances. How is that significantly different from AI? One is faster and the other is done more slowly with post processing. Editing photos to way beyond making them look more faithful to what your eye/brain witnessed doesn’t make anyone a better photographer. It’s just making more people settle on being average photographers and editing their photos to their imagination’s content to make it look like they’re better photographers than they are. How is that good for the craft? There ARE still some very good photographers that put in the work necessary and come back to a scene time and again in order to actually capture a brief, real moment where everything came together to be captured and preserved in a photo or series of photos. Any skilled editor can fake a moment in time that never actually existed and pretend they "photographed" it.

  • @kategage2159

    @kategage2159

    5 ай бұрын

    FTR I super edit my photos to create a mood, not the actual scene and currently I don't composite. But I've learned a lot about the limitations of the programs through editing. Figuring out that I need to step to the left, knowing how to not over/underexpose in-camera, knowing how to get a composition I want with the only lens I could bring, embracing the onsite limitations. I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm being THAT person who says it's not that black and white.

  • @zixzysm
    @zixzysm5 ай бұрын

    I agree in general with you both. There is a difference between going in under a specific class of photography (landscape, birds/animals, portraits, street) and using the photo with a process to overcome its limitations, or indeed, to use the limitations of the process (as with alternative processes) to create art. Continuing on art photo, me and my wife were just visiting Liljevalchs spring exhibition in Stockholm, and I was surprised and a little dismayed to find the information "manipulated photo" or "digitally enhanced photo" on some of the photographies. To me, entirely misplaced and taking away from the experience. Of course there will be manipulation with an art photo - that is what we do to get where we want to go...

  • @auksmann
    @auksmann5 ай бұрын

    Great discussion, thanks!

  • @lesdanser489
    @lesdanser4895 ай бұрын

    What are your thoughts on Topaz for noise reduction and sharpening? Is that cheating?

  • @jerseyreddevil3139
    @jerseyreddevil31395 ай бұрын

    I wanted to do some film shooting so I decided to get a Rolleiflex and also try medium format. I was surprised to find that all the film processing places I checked would scan the negative and do prints from the scan. I was glad to have the scans so I could do some basic editing and share the photos more easily. However, I was also concerned that I was not really getting prints like they would be from the negative. Since I had never shot medium format film, I don’t really know how the end results compare to doing everything from the negative. Any thoughts on this issue? Also is there anyplace that still does prints from medium format negatives? The film experience has proved to be more expensive than I had expected. Thank you for the interesting video!

  • @mxlunab

    @mxlunab

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm a photo lab tech and I can tell you since the late 1990s all film is digitally scanned in the vast majority of commercial labs. Both the software and the operator make color and exposure adjustments to get the photo to look close to a standard. The prints are made from the scan and the operator can also make further adjustments at time of printing. This applies to any size negative. If you want full control of scans you should look into having your own, at home, DSLR or mirrorless scanning setup. There's plenty of tutorials here on YT. As for your question about prints from medium format negatives, I assume you mean printed directly from negative to paper, without scanning? Those can be done at wet labs and are pretty rare, and pricey. Reddit might be able to point you to a current list of the existing ones. Another solution, which is the path some film photographers take, is to buy your own enlarger, photo paper, chemistry, and make your own prints in an at home lab. So basically, if you're doing film you have two choices: find a commercial lab that you trust, and that gets you results that you like through the modern process, or go DYI with old/adapted techniques for full control.

  • @jerseyreddevil3139

    @jerseyreddevil3139

    5 ай бұрын

    @@mxlunab Thanks for the info.

  • @mish19811
    @mish198115 ай бұрын

    What focal length you are using here?❤

  • @garysmith7545
    @garysmith75455 ай бұрын

    I used to take group photos of100+ company employees. I'd always take multiple exposures so that I could drop in "better" facial expressions over terrible ones. I'll routinely delete things that I feel deter from a shot - like we used to do spotting a negative but these days you can remove more than spots. My most recent controversy with my brother involved a de-noised film shot where I removed substantial graininess.

  • @Jviotr
    @Jviotr5 ай бұрын

    Is this the matrix?

  • @nadantagaming2276

    @nadantagaming2276

    5 ай бұрын

    Anything outside matrix?

  • @user-mp7xf8sp4l
    @user-mp7xf8sp4l5 ай бұрын

    Use that quote to get out of any and all traffic violations caught on camera. Reminds of the cassette tape commercial that asked "Is it live or is it Memorex".

  • @lloydbligh5601
    @lloydbligh56015 ай бұрын

    A lot of us are capturing memories they are not fake.

  • @donnawetter1513
    @donnawetter15135 ай бұрын

    Samsungs current RAW support in ProMode is definitely fake: if you take dng + jpg there is nothing to recover in highlights and shadows, while a 3rd party app produces a useable raw.

  • @markgoostree6334
    @markgoostree63345 ай бұрын

    There are pictures that are SOOC... like mine. I don't have the ability to do post processing. When I send them to the processor/printer I can crop sometimes. So, then... that shot isn't SOOC, is it.

  • @mirrorlessny
    @mirrorlessny5 ай бұрын

    feels like mics are a bit too hot, great content as usual 👍

  • @doug_gemmell_photography
    @doug_gemmell_photography5 ай бұрын

    Haha that is cool that you mention my photo of the Eagle with a pizza. 100% real , just the right place at the right time with my Nikon D500. I enjoyed the discussion of editing vs AI manipulating. I think the adjustments are part of the process , meaning your highlights , shadows ect . A.I is a different ball game but the camera sensor has limitations and shooting in RAW for instance gives me the opportunity to overcome some of that and get the photo closer to what my eyes saw. That Eagle photo for example, my Nikon under exposed the Eagle against that bright sky, so in post I moved up the shadows and brought down the highlights. That to me anyway, is a picture of what I actually saw.

  • @TonyAndChelsea

    @TonyAndChelsea

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh hi very glad to see you here! Love the photo and we gotta go up and visit that spot sometime soon.

  • @TheHamNinja
    @TheHamNinja5 ай бұрын

    Great topic. At every step in the process, some interpretation is made, and today it starts with digital cameras. Fujifilm and others have film simulations that start change what reality is... BW is not reality. As a photographer, it's getting harder though to keep the number of steps and intermediary interpretations to a minimum. I recently had some BW film developed and printed on Ilford paper. I don't do my own lab work and I was looking forward to getting back to photo roots. I expectged to see some that were not exposed correctly, etc. I was bummed when I found out that they used a scanned jpeg to print from, the scanner, which can add it's own interpretation. Ok, I'm going to pickup my Fujifilm camera and go shoot some BW. Thanks!

  • @krone5
    @krone55 ай бұрын

    whether you have a camera with a sensor or sensorless cameras recording light is recording light.

  • @nhk20
    @nhk205 ай бұрын

    It's a question of semantics. How much or how little does a sensor capture versus how much processing happens? It reminds me of how much many of us hated overprocessed HDR photos back in the day.

  • @jonathanscherer8567
    @jonathanscherer85675 ай бұрын

    The reason we have to edit photos to make them appear like what we saw ourselves is because even the best camera only has 12-15 stops of dynamic range, while the human eye has 21. In terms of math, it differs depending on the source. The issue is how subjective even the explanation of this can become. Having said that, what we see is so much different than how the camera sees. So I find in my photography trying to bring what I remember seeing back to the surface. Or, I could say, I try to bring out the image that's already there, to terribly rephrase a quote by Michelangelo.

  • @weekendwarrior8179
    @weekendwarrior81795 ай бұрын

    What's the stop someone on generating an image and then taking a photo of that image that's generated and saying that's a real picture

  • @rsm014
    @rsm0145 ай бұрын

    Love the ethics talk. Y’all should do that more often

  • @SamKnutson
    @SamKnutson5 ай бұрын

    I think adding something that wasn't there (fake moon) fake object is where you cross the line and the photo is a fake. Removing small distracting items using generative ai is the same thing we did for years it was just much more tedious. The core for me is that I am making the photo show what I experienced. I saw the beautiful bird I didn't even notice the bits of flotsum and jetsum on the surface of the water. Interesting I ran into the trend to disbelieve. Another local photographer and I were at the Thunderbirds practice for the Daytona 500 and she captured this amazing shot of a Thunderbird jet and a bald eagle! The Birds of Prey forum decried it as a photoshop fake till... she posted shots of the shot on her camera with the image info on the display and I posted my 3 frames from continuous shooting showing the eagle (mine was not a nice it was not in focus because I was wide open on the jet) showing the same scene different angle. People are so suspicious now of photos and soon video and audio. Samsung technology would insert a moon where none existed and it wasn't optimizing the image it was substituting a complete fabrication. Samsung lied full stop.

  • @erikhermansson1204
    @erikhermansson12045 ай бұрын

    This made me smile! 😅 "What is justice?!? 😵‍💫" 😂😂

  • @laika25
    @laika255 ай бұрын

    I absolutely LOVED this 1!

  • @rhetoricalrobot8359
    @rhetoricalrobot83595 ай бұрын

    "How can photographs be real if our eyes aren't real."

  • @davidlesliewilliams1513
    @davidlesliewilliams15135 ай бұрын

    There is no simple way of guaranteeing that a photo is what it claims to be. Software can be used on an edited image to reformat the file so that it looks as if you haven't even edited it. So for photo competitions it is no longer good enough to submit the raw file to prove you met the rules.

  • @enioleyva529
    @enioleyva5295 ай бұрын

    We gonna have to have a video of the whole process of making each image we take at this point 😂

  • @rpvfr
    @rpvfr5 ай бұрын

    I was taking some photos at a husky sled race event and showed a fellow photographer some photos from the previous day; first question was what photo editing software do I use! Answer: None, I just get the shutter speed right and point the camera in the right direction (a camera with good high ISO helps); if the photos no good I delete it :) At most I have cropped a photo, that's it.

  • @microminstrel
    @microminstrel5 ай бұрын

    This is an important conversation to have. We, as professional photographers, have a profound responsibility to the truth in a world that increasingly views it with apathy. Another great video, guys!

  • @TonyAndChelsea

    @TonyAndChelsea

    5 ай бұрын

    Glad someone understands the bigger picture here!

  • @marktrued9497
    @marktrued94975 ай бұрын

    Expectations for photographic truth were abandoned long ago. The absolute nearest any imaging process came to Truth was Kodachrome, and we abandoned it for convenience and quick turnaround time. Kodachrome was strictly lab processed, which was out of control or the ability for the user to alter or manipulate. It was 3 black and white emulsions to which pigments were added during processing, making it archival. And due to that process it had a known, reliable color palette. In summary, if you saw a Kodachrome slide of a UFO with Bigfoot, Jackie Onasis and Elvis stepping off the ramp, you might want to start looking for that UFO. (Or a near perfect model in a studio somewhere)

  • @donsmith2833
    @donsmith28335 ай бұрын

    Waves hand "That's not the photo you are looking for".

  • @Formulabruce
    @Formulabruce5 ай бұрын

    HDR changes colors on wires which is very noticeable and NOT Good... auto HDR on a Note 9.. Why do people ADD a Freekin GALAXY to train pics>??

  • @infinitypanther
    @infinitypanther5 ай бұрын

    Does this mean that we can't adjust shadows, highlights, contrast and things like that?

  • @buenaventuralife
    @buenaventuralife5 ай бұрын

    Deceiving the eyes of the viewer is photography (art?) from the beginning. Multiple exposures, multiple films through the enlarger on a single print, special films, and so much more. AI is not new, we now have the computer power and memory to make it fast and simple. I tend to be a purist in that I want my print to be what I saw (or at least close to that).

  • @user-qz9hi3wm7l
    @user-qz9hi3wm7l5 ай бұрын

    WAIT WHAT. Are you telling me my poster of a border collie riding a tricycle with a cat standing on his head with a balance beam and two mice doing handstands on the end is FAKE?!

  • @mrz1342
    @mrz13425 ай бұрын

    You are the only honest pro who talk about this topic for while. I appreciate and gratefull for criticising Photos in the right way to recognise Art from Manupulated image. Although at present who cares, 99.99% of the population globally has been brainwashed already! Thank you.

  • @capslock9031
    @capslock90315 ай бұрын

    I call my "basic edits" "technical corrections", which points to things that couldn't be solved by the camera and lens itself (like color temp & gamut, exposure, sharpness, lens distortion). Everything on top of that would be "creative edits" where I take any liberty I want, since a photo is a photo is a photo. I want to create good pictures, not truthful visual representations of photons present at the time of exposure. That's just data science. Realism in that sense has always been a hoax - except maybe for journalism, where it is an ideal to strive towards, but not what is actually the case. I like the watermarking initiative in the context of reporting. Great discussion - thanks!

  • @BillFerris
    @BillFerris5 ай бұрын

    The question of disclosure is both simple and complex. It's simple, in that the ethical conundrum we face isn't over the image-making process used. It's when we intentionally misrepresent an image as something it isn't that we enter an ethical minefield. If an image is a product of the photographic process with only basic processing tools used, I don't think any disclosure is required beyond calling it a photo. When is greater disclosure required? It depends. In journalism, professional standards of objectivity and accuracy demand that photos accompanying news stories be held to a high standard. The integrity of the news agency is at stake. If the audience learns that an image presented as a photo of an astronaut walking on the Moon was actually an AI-generated image, that agency risks losing all credibility. In photo contests, there are often rules limiting the kind of processing that can be done to entered images. If elements that were present when the photo was made are removed or if elements that were not present are added, that misrepresents the moment captured in the photo. Such entries are often not allowed or become disqualified when discovered. The exact same image, however, would not raise any ethical issues if displayed in an art gallery. Society gives artists tremendous latitude in the processes used to create their original works. A Chuck Close photorealistic pencil sketch crosses no ethical lines. It looks like a giant black & white photo from a distance but is revealed to be a sketch upon closer examination. There is no deception. Even found objects - e.g. urinals - can be presented as "art" in exhibits, and recognized and reviewed as such. Art, by definition, challenges the societal boundaries. My personal policy is to not use processing tools to remove content within the frame or add content to the frame. That simplifies things for me. Others make full use of all the available image-making tools to create original works. My recommendation is to disclose the process used or the type of image made. If it's a composite photo, a collage, or AI-generated imagery, say so. Both the image-maker and the image should be recognized for the work done and the resulting product. To have a work recognized as something it isn't does a disservice to the artist, their methods and to those who view and appreciate the work.

  • @MaunoKoivistoOfficial
    @MaunoKoivistoOfficial5 ай бұрын

    That quote could be from Goebbels. It's the rhetoric of someone who wants to skew your sense of reality with wordplay. It actually made me feel kind of gross

  • @Topgunphoto
    @Topgunphoto5 ай бұрын

    I feel like a lot of photographers have moved into Digital photographers. This is when the image doesn't pass the eye test, like what you saw when you took the pic. Even sports photographers have gone to the extreme by over saturating colors especially for outside games. They look more like EA Sports games instead of a game seen in person.

  • @michaeloravecz5752
    @michaeloravecz57525 ай бұрын

    Duade Paton does a straightforward job of 'disclosing' the reality of his photos in his KZread videos. First, he typically has a camera documenting himself in the field on his photo shoots. This is the equivalent of Tony's body camera. Second, he shows a final edited photo and then shows the original raw photo slowly blending into the crop and adjusted final photo.

  • @TonyAndChelsea

    @TonyAndChelsea

    5 ай бұрын

    That sounds perfect! Great context.

  • @thomasuriarte3182
    @thomasuriarte31825 ай бұрын

    Samsung took a big hit of the devil’s lettuce before answering that question.