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A technician named Roger explained to her that an “iPhone is not a camera, it’s a computer.”
“It takes a series of burst images very quickly even though it’s not a panoramic or a burst,” explains Coates.
Roger informed Coates that she moved her arms as the camera took a series of images from left to right and it made a different image on each side of the photo.
“It’s made like an AI decision and it stitched those two photos together," Roger told Coates.
My conundrum is this: if you were the judge in court, and the prosecution wanted to submit this "photo" as evidence for some reason - say to show that the woman really was in the wedding shop - would you accept it? Could someone go to jail on the basis of this photo?
Should this photo be admissible in a court of law?
Further questions I have are: is it still a "photo" if it is edited, or is it now a 'work of art'? Is it an edit if a computer processes a photo automatically? Is the qualitative difference between a small edit and a large one something we can live with, or is any edit flawed? Is it right to have (greater) trust in mechanical photography vs computer photography?
I guess the deeper question relates to how much we can trust modern technology, or even any re-presentations.
Let's not forget Samsung already fakes moon photos:
Samsung caught faking zoom photos of the Moon
(Original photo from 'One in a Million' iPhone Photo Shows Three Versions of the Same Woman)
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