Bureaucrat with delusions of grandeur. Vegetarian. Runner. Hopefully triathlete at some point. I've lost 50 pounds in the past year, and have completely changed my life. In other words, I got awesome.

4th December 2011

Photo reblogged from Mohandas Gandhi with 479 notes

mohandasgandhi:

Software to rate how drastically photos are retouched is being developed

The photographs of celebrities and models in fashion advertisements and  magazines are routinely buffed with a helping of digital polish. The  retouching can be slight — colors brightened, a stray hair put in place,  a pimple healed. Or it can be drastic — shedding 10 or 20 pounds,  adding a few inches in height and erasing all wrinkles and blemishes,  done using Adobe’s Photoshop software, the photo retoucher’s magic wand.
“Fix one thing, then another and pretty soon you end up with Barbie,”  said Hany Farid, a professor of computer science and a digital forensics  expert at Dartmouth.
And that is a problem, feminist legislators in France, Britain and  Norway say, and they want digitally altered photos to be labeled. In  June, the American Medical Association adopted a policy on body image  and advertising that urged advertisers and others to “discourage the  altering of photographs in a manner that could promote unrealistic  expectations of appropriate body image.”
Dr. Farid said he became intrigued by the problem after reading about  the photo-labeling proposals in Europe. Categorizing photos as either  altered or not altered seemed too blunt an approach, he said.
Dr. Farid and Eric Kee, a Ph.D. student in computer science at  Dartmouth, are proposing a software tool for measuring how much fashion  and beauty photos have been altered, a 1-to-5 scale that distinguishes  the infinitesimal from the fantastic. Their research is being published this week in a scholarly journal, The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Their work is intended as a technological step to address concerns about  the prevalence of highly idealized and digitally edited images in  advertising and fashion magazines. Such images, research suggests,  contribute to eating disorders and anxiety about body types, especially  among young women. 
The Dartmouth research, said Seth Matlins, a former talent agent and  marketing executive, could be “hugely important” as a tool for  objectively measuring the degree to which photos have been altered. He  and his wife, Eva Matlins, the founders of a women’s online magazine, Off Our Chests, are trying to gain support for legislation in America. Their proposal, the Self-Esteem Act, would require photos that have been “meaningfully changed” to be labeled.
(Continue reading….)

As a former graphic design major, I concur that this or other proactive steps need to be taken. Retouching has gotten absolutely out of control and is actually harming our youth. I’m not having it.


BREAKING NEWS: Angelina Jolie is hotter without photoshop than I will ever be WITH photoshop.

mohandasgandhi:

Software to rate how drastically photos are retouched is being developed

The photographs of celebrities and models in fashion advertisements and magazines are routinely buffed with a helping of digital polish. The retouching can be slight — colors brightened, a stray hair put in place, a pimple healed. Or it can be drastic — shedding 10 or 20 pounds, adding a few inches in height and erasing all wrinkles and blemishes, done using Adobe’s Photoshop software, the photo retoucher’s magic wand.

“Fix one thing, then another and pretty soon you end up with Barbie,” said Hany Farid, a professor of computer science and a digital forensics expert at Dartmouth.

And that is a problem, feminist legislators in France, Britain and Norway say, and they want digitally altered photos to be labeled. In June, the American Medical Association adopted a policy on body image and advertising that urged advertisers and others to “discourage the altering of photographs in a manner that could promote unrealistic expectations of appropriate body image.”

Dr. Farid said he became intrigued by the problem after reading about the photo-labeling proposals in Europe. Categorizing photos as either altered or not altered seemed too blunt an approach, he said.

Dr. Farid and Eric Kee, a Ph.D. student in computer science at Dartmouth, are proposing a software tool for measuring how much fashion and beauty photos have been altered, a 1-to-5 scale that distinguishes the infinitesimal from the fantastic. Their research is being published this week in a scholarly journal, The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Their work is intended as a technological step to address concerns about the prevalence of highly idealized and digitally edited images in advertising and fashion magazines. Such images, research suggests, contribute to eating disorders and anxiety about body types, especially among young women.

The Dartmouth research, said Seth Matlins, a former talent agent and marketing executive, could be “hugely important” as a tool for objectively measuring the degree to which photos have been altered. He and his wife, Eva Matlins, the founders of a women’s online magazine, Off Our Chests, are trying to gain support for legislation in America. Their proposal, the Self-Esteem Act, would require photos that have been “meaningfully changed” to be labeled.

(Continue reading….)

As a former graphic design major, I concur that this or other proactive steps need to be taken. Retouching has gotten absolutely out of control and is actually harming our youth. I’m not having it.

BREAKING NEWS: Angelina Jolie is hotter without photoshop than I will ever be WITH photoshop.

Source: The New York Times

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    why is the world so fucked up?
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    oh wow i just read this earlier today because lisa was writing about it for her english thing it’s pretty cool yo, i...
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