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August 09, 2006

Photoshopping and Fucking

There's been an interesting story doing the rounds about how bloggers have exposed a Beirut-based photographer for digitally manipulating his war images. The photographer, Adnan Hajj, turned out to be working for Reuters, and the news agency hastily dismissed him and removed his entire archive of photographs - around 900 images - from their database.

This has been cited as an example of 'citizen journalism' helping to make the media more accountable and transparent. And the National Union of Journalists was prompted to issue a rather lame and belated press release condemning the practice.

Meanwhile, on an email discussion list for editorial photographers, initial discussion centred on how awful the photographer's 'Photoshopping' skills were. Not the fact that a trusted newsgatherer was prepared to distort the truth and, in doing so, prepared to compromise the integrity and reputation of other photographers currently risking their lives in the Lebanon.

But how far was the truth actually distorted? So far we have been presented with evidence that Hajj added some extra plumes of smoke and, possibly, accentuated the extent of damage caused by Israeli bombs to one of his images. It also appears that he might have added a couple of extra flares being fired to a picture of an Israeli fighter jet.

Yet, up to a point, this kind of post-doctoring is common practice. Given the technology to do it, what photographer would not attempt to enhance his images by, for example, brightening colours or making skies appear more dramatic? Furthermore, the staging of news pictures has a long history and is still widespread today. As long as the essence of the story is not misrepresented, what is wrong with a certain amount of interpretation? After all, this is exactly what happens with writers.

If he is guilty as charged, Hajj clearly overstepped the mark. And given the ferocious politics in the Middle East, has been more than a tad foolish (his images really did not need any enhancement to tell the story). But, as wiser voices on the editorial photographers' email list pointed out, the real story is how they got past Reuters' editors. Without proper gatekeepers in place, and given the current proliferation in potentially unreliable citizen contributors, it is no surprise that news organisations are laying themselves open to mauling by politically motivated bloggers.

Hajj has become a scapegoat. Perhaps he will find some solace in cleaning up on all the unauthorised uses of his images around the world. It should amount to a tidy sum in reproduction fees.

That's right bloggers. It's called copyright.

Posted by leshacks at August 9, 2006 10:36 AM | TrackBack
Comments

Hajj won't be doing any chasing. I believe you'll find that Reuters contracts take copyright from their freelances.

You misrepresent EPUK discussions. I'll have to precis, since it is a confidential list:

#1,#2,#3,#4 asked for and provided links to the images and blog discussions, nothing else.

#5 gave a link and expressed the view that the cloning was badly done, should not have got past any desk, and the photographer should be sacked

#6 post gave another link to the before and after pics.

#7 gave another link and
made exactly the point you say was not made, the risk and damage it did to others reporting the conflict.

#8, #9 contained links, not comments

#10 contained a link, expressed that it was poor PS, that the poster felt somewhat sorry for the photog. who must be under pressure, that it didn't help other photog's but that ethics seem a bit of an incongruous preoccupation in Beirut. And that Reuters should have picked it up

#11 said thanks for a link.

#12 said the photog must be crazed from pressure, but why didn't Reuters notice?

#13 pointed everyone at the story on the EPUK site http://www.epuk.org/News-snippets/reuters-under-fire-for-faked-photos, which had appeared the previous day

#14 agreed it was bad news for other photographers in Lebanon and cited one whose blog was under verbal fire from archair experts, whom he suggested might like to visit personally.

#15 was an apology over some stupidity with a link

#16 contained a forwarded account from the same photographer described in #14. He'd been within 50m of an Israeli missile explosion that day. '"I'm being bombed by the israelis and these blogging cunts sit there in their cosy armchairs and write this stuff"

By then the thread had been running 1h 14m. Your derisive description of discussion on EPUK is a work of fiction. Perhaps Reuters might give you a job.

Posted by: Tony Sleep at August 10, 2006 03:02 AM

Thanks Tony

Maybe Johnny Hack & co would like to amend their header? "No brief, no commisssion, no favour, no fear, no connection with reality" would seem to fit the ethos here.

David Hoffman

Posted by: David Hoffman at August 11, 2006 12:26 PM
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