I just had a look at photos I took yesterday when my friend Lety and I went to La Vita Bella for comida. I have not touched this photo and it was on all the usual settings..Click to enlarge it and look closely. How could this possibly happen?
Your camera was hijacked by AI. It’s a robot conspiracy. They’re after us–and gaining! Trash your computer before it turns against you! WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE!
Kim is right, it has to do with shutter speed. Photos are taken from the top down. Depending on light and aperture and shutter settings you can see a difference from the top and bottom, hence trees or buildings looking slanted. My guess is, his arm was moving when it captured one part of the arm to the next.
This is a trick question, right?
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Nope. Scouts honor.. this really happened.
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I don’t know how this can happen!!!!
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It just seems impossible…and eerie.
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Yes very much so
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It’s almost like a partial double-exposure 😲 How weird 😱
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I know but the background is consistent! Spooky. Looks like I photoshopped the arm in again but cross my heart… I did no editing on the photo. Eerie.
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No idea
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Shutter speed was too slow? I’d, but that’s weird!!
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Magic! Has the glass stem interfered?
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I think she definitely caught out the ghost in the machine! 🤣
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That is creepy!!!
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Creeps me out, too, Tiffany.
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I can’t even imagine what would have caused that. It’s not a double exposure. I’m not sure what it is, but it’s almost Picasso-like.
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I know. It just picked out one part, duplicated it and stuck it back in the photo.
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Your camera was hijacked by AI. It’s a robot conspiracy. They’re after us–and gaining! Trash your computer before it turns against you! WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE!
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Oh God. I just paid a fortune for this computer with 2T memory. What do I do? What do I do?
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Wow! Somehow that forearm got in there in two places, but I’ll be dipped how to explain it! Did the camera help itself to some of that wine?
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Well, the most novel explanation yet, Eilene.
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Very strange🤔
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What do you get when you cross an elephant with a rhinoceros?
“El-IF-I-Know” LOL – just posted to make ya laugh – the long list of how this could have happened? Sheesh – no one would read – LOL
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Kim is right, it has to do with shutter speed. Photos are taken from the top down. Depending on light and aperture and shutter settings you can see a difference from the top and bottom, hence trees or buildings looking slanted. My guess is, his arm was moving when it captured one part of the arm to the next.
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OMG. My arm fell apart. No blood though.
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