Evening Standard: camera covert propaganda.

One of the hidden possibilities of digital tools for images is to modify important photos blatantly distorting the facts and introducing elements of judgment forged through a sophisticated use of techniques within everyone's reach. The English site 'The Memory Hole' has taken a report made ​​at the time of Indymedia UK and on a cover of the British tabloid Evening Standard that, for the record, has a circulation of about 400,000 copies. The full-page photos depicting an event of jubilation for the fall of Saddam Hussein with a particularly large crowd. The user corresponding to the nickname 'gnu' showed the almost unequivocal in a few 'tweaks' palusibilmente made with the stamp tool photoshop, who seem to have 'added' pieces of crowd in perspective for artificially increasing the number, supporting by deception the arguments given in the article. A copy and paste the parties indicted, allows an objective analysis that leaves little doubt.