Common to all of the above is the principle that we simply do not attempt to alter history after the fact. This is the lynch-pin of trust. Without that, you as the reporting journalist may as well not even bother showing up, because I as the viewer/reader/audience won't believe a thing you tell me.
You do realize that in all of your responses thus far you are effectively advocating for the unethical practice of photojournalism, don't you? Your view of the acceptability of unacknowledged post-creation mucking around with the content elements in a reportage photograph is at odds with every single newsgathering organization in existence. They all have rules attempting to prevent exactly what you are championing.
You do realize that professional photojournalists have been fired for doing exactly that for which you are strongly advocating as being perfectly acceptable, right?
Ken
1) It very much IS the reporter's job to decide what facts to include when writing an article, and what is unnecessary or irrelevant to the issue at hand. This is why you very rarely read about the peeling paint or scuff marks in a room where someone gives a press release.
2) You argue that there is some great and magically difference in the reporter snapping a photo
now and editing it, vs snapping a photo 10 seconds later, and they would produce a pair of photos of which you would have no way of telling apart, and you want to argue that
this matters
3) My argument has been that it is illogical and serves no purpose to froth at the mouth and attempt to lynch photojournalists who
use the tools at their disposal to produce a clear and honest image of the subject matter at hand, while pretending that an 'unedited photo' is magically somehow more honest and truthful. Along side that is my argument that we should be holding photojournalists to a
Higher standard of honesty and ethics by providing images which best represent the events, and not pretending that a reasonable usage of photoshop
actually has an affect on this
4) This is holding photojournalists to an arbitrarily different standard than others. Newspaper articles aren't published straight out of a reporter's notebook. Phrasing is reworked, information is dropped, additional information is sought if they feel they are coming up short on something.
Editing is done. We don't demand to see a reporter's notebook, and then call for their metaphorical lynching when we spot a difference.
5) Is it 'cheating' if you used a different lens and obliterate part of an image through depth of field? Is it 'cheating' if you snap dozens of photos and then only provide a select few? A photojournalist's job is to provide a clear and objective view of what they are reporting on, and as such it is my belief that we should expect them to do just that with the tools they have available to them. It is up to the photographer to use their tools wisely and honestly. This is
NOT supporting wild and unrestricted use of photoshop.
6) "What might be done..." is a slippery slope fallacy. You can apply the exact same "What might be done" arguments to completely unedited photos. "What might be done if..."
- You stage a photo?
- Claim a photo is of something other than what is actually happening?
- Use strong bias in what you do and do not photograph?
So I do hope you can forgive me for not being clearer with how I've addressed this point in my past posts.
You do realize that all of my arguments have been about changing to focus to
real ethical practices, and breaking down the illogical current views that anything photoshop is
always bad, and that it can
never be trusted. Many in the world have settled on a horribly arbitrary black and white view on the matter. A photojournalist who
abuses photoshop to present something that does not
accurately represent the events is of course no different than any other journalist who outright lies in their reporting.
However the set of all photojournalists who
use photoshop is not the same as the set of all photojournalists who
abuse photoshop. Yes, I fully acknowledge that it
can be abused, and that we should not trust those who
do abuse their tools to present something untruthful or unfaithful to the events they are reporting on. I do not claim to have a hard and fast line that will work for all images which will clearly define where one has wandered into the realm of abuse, and actually suggest caution and very careful thought be employed before any editing is made, but at the same time I do not place that line of abuse as starting at "Open Photoshop".
Also just because something
has been done, or that it is currently the widely accepted view, doesn't mean that it is actually
right.