Monday, August 27, 2007

John Nack at Adobe links to a video that I saw up on YouTube as well the other day after a friend sent me link, where a couple of incredibly smart people have presented a new way to resize (and otherwise edit) images. And apparently, according to Nack, one of those smart people - Shai Avidan - is working at Adobe now. Here's the video:

Technically, it's very interesting, even amazing to watch. From a pure photojournalism ethics standpoint, it's certainly to be considered as yet another real concern to those who work in the field. As much of a technology geek as I am, I was a photojournalist long before I got heavy into computers. As soon as I started watching the video my thoughts were as a former news photographer: "Wow, that's a lie." Proof again why art and reporting are not even close to the same thing, and why so few people with a camera fit into both the artist and reporter skins. You don't need to anymore, you can just cheat. Or at least that's what some people would call it.

It's becoming easier and easier to take liberties with the truth when it comes to recording scenes. With the continued technological progress in digital imaging pretty much anyone with a few bucks for some software and a computer (or even without a few bucks if their ethics are truly in the toilet) can create some pretty compelling imagery. But the easy way out doesn't do it for me... I prefer the actual scene, and non-story-telling edits limited to things like cropping, minor exposure compensation, lint removal and color/white balance. At least that's the way I feel with regard to photos that need to carry the journalism label (and for the most part for my photos, as well).

Artists and anyone creating images for effect as opposed to telling a true story, you can go for it. I won't count it against you too much, heh. But I think I'll just try to stick to taking a good natural picture. :-)



Add/Read: Comments [6]
Random Stuff | Tech
Monday, August 27, 2007 9:45:06 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
#  Trackback

Referred by:
http://www.greghughes.net/ [Referral]
Monday, August 27, 2007 10:29:32 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
you must be sending a lot of traffic their way...I can't get the video to play in your blog or directly on the YouTube page.
Monday, August 27, 2007 10:33:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Hmmm, working for me. I seriously doubt I would send an amount of traffic to YouTube that would register as even a blip on their traffic screen though. Heh. But thanks for the pseudo-ego-boost. :)
Monday, August 27, 2007 11:01:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
The video worked for me, and all I can say is I'm very skeptical. Maybe skeptical isn't the right word, I'm very disapointed maybe. As a photographer enthusiast (I'm not good enough yet to classify it any other way) I would be upset if a web site took liberties with my photo and removed pixels, or added pixels. I don't think an algorithm can determine what is best on a photo I've framed in my lens.

I think the whole thing is disturbing. What's the problem we're trying to solve here? Scrolling? Image size? I don't get it.
John Batdorf
Monday, August 27, 2007 11:06:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
@John - It does feel a bit like a solution looking for a problem, doesn't it? I agree, I find it ethically disturbing, not becuas eof what it can do technically (that part is pretty cool), but rather because of what people can use it for (since we know all technology that requires people to actually do the right thing ultimately fails in that regard).
Tuesday, August 28, 2007 8:48:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
The principle (using an importance function to determine what should be omitted from a compressed presentation) can be applied to text as well. I invented a technology (patent #6,172,685) to do so. It allowed presentation of a summary of an entire article, for example, in a small area.

The same concerns arose: is it ethical to present a compressed (or otherwise altered) form of some one else's work, be it an image or text?

At the same time, is this any different from presenting an image or music encoded in a lossy format?

The visual impact of this video is far more powerful than my invention. As far as its uses are concerned, the best one would be to generate thumbnail images linking to the original. Rather than simply scaling the image down, the technology removes information redundancy, increasing "information density". Ethical concerns are mitigated because the viewer knows the thumbnail is not the original.
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