Posted on 11/26/2008 2:52:01 AM PST by jetxnet
It really is amazing how many people don't think BO could've forged his online Certificate of Birth. Digital forgery is nothing new and has been around for years.
Before this, no one has either been bold and/or dumb enough to take it to such a magnitude in attempting to fool the masses.
Before this, no one has either been bold and/or dumb enough to take it to such a magnitude in attempting to fool the masses.
Myself, I have done some digital forgery. As a programmer, I never had time to play with graphics much, but still wanted my stuff to look nice. So what did I do? I just did an image search on the web and found banners, logos and borders I liked. Most of them had text already on them, so I just replaced that text with my own. Good as new, you can't tell the difference, at least not from afar.
But, zoom in and whooaa Nelly, that ugly dithered, granulated, washed-out coloring of pixels between the text on the forged graphic. Needless to say, it annoyed me, but then thought to myself "well I couldn't tell until I zoomed in alot, and most people don't zoom in on the graphics, so no-one will notice".
Sure enough, I even got compliments on a few! I had the last laugh i guess.
You see, on a non-forged image with text, the text is crisp, and there is no "color bleeding" of the text onto the background. I'll explain why this is but may get a bit technical, so please try to visualize the concepts laid out here and apply what you learn.
I'm sure you have heard of image editors like Adobe Photoshop. These editors allow you to create and manipulate images. In order to allow you to edit any part of an image, the image editor reserves it's own file extension to keep track of all that image's properties. In this example, Adobe Photoshop has the file extension .PSD.
Image properties and attributes are things like how many pixels the image has, along with what each color of a pixel is. When you pull an image into Photoshop for editing, it detects the file format. If it is .PSD, the editor knows everything about the image. You can add text to the background and it will make perfect calculations as to what pixels should be colored to create the text, giving you a clean, clear-cut, color transition from the text to the background.
Over the years, image editors have become more sophsticated and now most allow you to directly scan images into the editor as the native file format to minimize "image loss". In other words, the image editor will take an inventory of the scanned image's attributes such as shape, size, colors and more. It does an OK job, but there is and always will be "image loss", because the image being scanned isn't native to the editor.
It's great if you have an image where you do not need to alter or replace text. The image looks fine, but if you try to remove and/or replace the text on the orignal scanned image, low and behold, you were warned about "image loss", now you get to it see up close and personal (but only if you zoom in).
The image editor creates a separate layer to super-impose that text onto the original foreign image layer. Think of an image layer as a separate, yet, transparent new image that will lay over the top of an existing one. Only if the text and background are part of the same image layer, will you not have "pixilation" abnormalties. Only the device that created the image originally can know the true properties of that layer, and this why the image editor automatically creates a new layer, because it doesn't know enough about the existing one.
If you type the new text onto the scanned or imported image from a foreign source or of a different image format, it looks pretty-good. But, as stated before, if you zoom in, you will see this "glow" and pixelized discoloration around the text.
The glow is created because the image editor makes a guess as to what the original existing image layer's pixel locations are. Remember, when you create/type text, the editor selects the pixels it will color to make that text. When you scanned or imported the non-native image into the editor, it made a calculation as to what the pixel size and locations were, relative to the properties and size demensions it discovered. It isn't perfect though, so it makes a guess based on what it found selects the pixels on the new layer to color.
The distorted glow is the difference in "image loss" or mis-matching between the two layers. Think of it as the remainder of a math equation. Everything doesn't compute perfectly, so it guesses and does a pretty-good job, but you still get the glow. If the text were part of the same layer as the original image, therer is no glow, because the math is nearly perfect in caculating which pixels to color.
Now, apply what you have learned. Of the two images (A and B) below, what image is forged and what one is not?
Image A: http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/kk248/jamie83pics/bc19.jpg
Image B: http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/kk248/jamie83pics/bc22.jpg
If you guessed, image B, then a Cigar for you.
Now, apply what you have learned. Of the two images (A and B) below, what image is forged?
Now guessing "B" would be the only correct answer.
Your explanation is off a bit.
IIANM, the “glow” is an artifact of the JPEG compression algorithm. JPEG is designed for, and good for, photographs and similar images with gradations...but it doesn’t do well with sharp discrete edges.
In B... you could have gone to the menu-item(Selective Color) in Photoshop to remove the white glow and make it match the green backgound. Then, you could have blurred around the black letters to make it almost a perfect match.
Only someone in the obama camp wasn’t that skilled.....
Ooops, meant different father
I think the biggest reason people have for not believing this is a possibility is that they assume someone wouldn’t have the nerve. You notice that Barack Poopoo’d running for President for so long and then changed his mind. I think someone convinced him that it was no big deal, and that it could be taken care of.
Or maybe he thought he’d never get this far.
But for those same poeple who think it’s like saying you spotted a UFO, I wouldn’t have imagined the KGB would poison a Russian Candidate to looking like a frog either. But they did. Why do folks assume we are immune to corruption on a massive scale here?
Image A: http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/kk248/jamie83pics/bc19.jpg
Image B: http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/kk248/jamie83pics/bc22.jpg
The recent sign-up forgery expert needed a little help on those links.
If this was a plot for an adventure novel, you would think it was too unbelievable. Truth really can be more strange than fiction.
Do you think the typeface used in samples shown in your example (which is purportedly the actual notice from the newspaper) is consistent with that used in 1961?
YES! I keep commenting that I feel like I’m trapped in a John Grisham novel.
Yes, it seems most people are too trusting and/or dumbed down for whatever reason. Alot of it is due to censorship by the MSM.
Yeah, the pixelation is due to compression, or because of different resolutions between the original image and the added layer for the new text.
You would have a smooth color-gradient from the text to the background, had the text and image been part of the same layer and same resolutions.
It’s an obvious forgery ..let’s Obama gets exposed for the fraud he is.
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