English, asked by jdivyam405, 7 months ago

Much to their annoyance, the desk workers are routinely reminded that a picture is worth a thousand words—except that sometimes there can be wrong “words” as happened last week when Reuters was forced to withdraw more than 900 pictures taken by a freelance photographer after it was suspected that he had “doctored” two recent photographs of the Israeli-Lebanon conflict. In one picture, the smoke billowing from an apartment block after an Israeli air strike was allegedly thickened by the photographer, Adnan Hajj, to dramatise the impact of the bombardment — and in another two flares were suspected to have been added to an image of an Israeli jet in action over Lebanon. The allegation of doctoring, first made by several bloggers, was confirmed by Reuters after an in-house investigation. Mr. Hajj, who had sold pictures to Reuters for more than 10 years, denied manipulating the two photographs and attributed the thick smoke in the first picture to “bad lighting” and the fact that he was “trying to remove dust marks.” As for the second, he said, “there was no problem with it — not at all.” But Reuters was not convinced and said it was removing all of these pictures from its database and would not be using his service anymore. Indeed, a photograph can be manipulated in more ways — and more effectively — to convey a false reality than it is possible to do through the written word. Ask any clever photographer and he will tell you the tricks camera can be made to play. At a seminar recently, one journalist recalled how there was a time when British photographers, covering stories about famine or floods in Third World countries, would carry teddy bears with them in order to use them as props for pictures supposedly showing that all that was left in household, stricken by death and destruction, were children’s toys.


As per the passage, a camera:

always gives fake pictures
never gives fake pictures
sometimes may give fake pictures
none of these​

Answers

Answered by shiv13kumar13
6

Answer:

Explanation:

sometimes lie

Answered by 1304vaishaligupta
0

As per the passage, a camera sometimes may give fake pictures .

1) A camera always said the truth is a wrong statement. there are so many things behind that we just have to find that things .

2) Truth is lying behind the camera . We can see the truth by finding something about that . Truth always lying behind .

3) A photo said so many things but we can't able to understand so we have to find the truth to understand the thing .

4) Fake means manipulated. Most photos these days have been manipulated in some way. When the camera creates her JPG for the shot, it's already being manipulated by the camera software.

5) Of course, if the image was consciously altered to include additional information that was not captured by the camera, or vice versa, important information was removed, implying a different kind of manipulation.

6) Depending on the skill of the retoucher, detecting such traces of manipulation may be easy, difficult, or impossible. 

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https://brainly.in/question/31584413

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