Civil war in Ukraine

The software in itself is neutral: it does not know what is an alteration or a manipulation. So, when it notices an error, the operator needs to consider whether it is an image manipulation, or just an accident.

In other words, anomalies can be introduced by innocent actions related to saving or modifying an image, such as transferring it to a different format, adjusting the contrast or adding a word box. But it is difficult for a layman to assess the intricacies involved.

To buttress the new report, Kramer cited the work of Bellingcat, a group of “citizen journalists” who have made a solid business out of reaffirming whatever Western propaganda is claiming, whether about Syria, Ukraine or Russia.

Bellingcat’s founder Eliot Higgins also had raised doubts about the Russian photos – using Dr. Krawetz’s FotoForensics software – but those findings were subsequently debunked by Dr. Krawetz himself and other experts. While Kramer cited Higgins’s earlier analysis, the Times reporter left out the fact that those findings were disputed by professional experts.

Dr. Krawetz also found the new photographic analysis both amateurish and deceptive. When I contacted him by email, he declined an interview and noted that Bellingcat fans were already on the offensive, trying to shut down dissent to the new report.

In an email to me, he wrote: “I have already seen the Bellingcat trolls verbally attack me, their ‘reporters’ use intimidation tactics, and their CEO insults me. (Hmmm … First he uses my software, then his team seeks me out as an expert, then he insults me when my opinion differs from his.)”

If it’s true that the first casualty of war is truth, the old saying also seems to apply to a new Cold War.

[For more on Bellingcat and its erroneous work, seeConsortiumnews.com’s “MH-17 Case: ‘Old’ Journalism vs. ‘New.’[9]”]

References

  1. ^ Consortium News (consortiumnews.com)
  2. ^ exchange (twitter.com)
  3. ^ report (www.armscontrolwonk.com)
  4. ^ article (www.nytimes.com)
  5. ^ Russia Supplied Missile Launchers to Separatists, U.S. Official Says (www.washingtonpost.com)
  6. ^ What Did US Spy Satellites See in Ukraine? (consortiumnews.com)
  7. ^ a regular contributor to the Times’ anti-Russian propaganda (consortiumnews.com)
  8. ^ an interview (time.com)
  9. ^ MH-17 Case: ‘Old’ Journalism vs. ‘New.’ (consortiumnews.com)
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