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The 1912 War On Fake Photos

from the everything-old-is-new-again dept

In recent weeks there has been a flurry of laws, regulatory proposals, and lawsuits regarding “deepfakes,” along with the usual rising levels of concern in the media about how the world won’t be able to handle this. For some perspective, the Pessimist’s Archive just published a story highlighting how a nearly identical fear gripped the world in 1912 regarding “fake” photos. We’ve republished it here, with permission, though you really should subscribe to the Pessimist’s Archive as well.

Concern about deceptively edited photos feels like a very modern anxiety, yet a century ago similar worries were being litigated…

Portrait photography gave rise to an industry of photo ‘retouching’ – analog ‘beauty filters’ – to flatter subjects in a way portrait painters once did. This trend lead to questions about technology distorting our perceptions of beauty, reality and truth:

An 1897 issue of the New-York Tribune would declare the assumption “Photographs Do Not Lie” an “exploded notion”, saying:

“…at the present time photographs may be and are made to lie with great frequency and facility.”

Other commercial applications of photo retouching emerged: in 1911 tourists visiting Washington D.C. could acquire fake photographs of themselves posing with then President of the United States William Taft. This troubled government officials. Upon discovering the practice in 1911, a United States Attorney ordered it stopped:

One (literal) photo-shop offering the novel souvenirs appealed to the White House for its blessing to continue the trade, but was denied. (the practice was not against the law, but pressure from the White House appeared effective if only temporarily — in the capital)

Photographic Crimes

The following year a fugitive – wanted for people trafficking – was found in possession of a fake photo posing with President Taft, it was reported he’d used it to buy the trust of his victims:

That this seemingly benign practice had been weaponized prompted some to demand it be regulated against abuse. The Justice Department prepared a law, that was introduced by then Senator Henry Cabot Lodge — who’d similarly been troubled after reportedly finding a photograph of himself with someone he’d never met.

On July 29, 1912 the bill was introduced to the Senate: “to prohibit the making, showing or distributing of fraudulent photographs”:

The law would make it illegal “to make, sell, publish, or show” any “fraudulent or untrue photograph, or picture purporting to be a photograph” of anyone who had not first given permission. Violation would see punishment of up to 6-months in jail or up to a $1000 fine ($31,797 adjusted for inflation.)

The proposed rules made headlines across the US, bringing the topic of fake photographs to wider attention:

The Intelligencer Journal of Pennsylvania applauded Senator Lodge’s efforts to combat the “miserable business of creating fake photographs”, saying while the technology of photography was a “wonderful art”, it was “manifestly in need of control against abuse.”

Intelligencer Journal Lancaster, Pennsylvania •  Tue, Jul 30, 1912 Page 4

The piece emphasized the need for “national and state laws” to address negatives “artfully combined to tell pictorial lies” something the author called “photographic crimes”warning that anyone was now vulnerable to slander from fake photos “apparently faithful and exhibited as the testimony of the innocent sun.”

Not everyone was a fan of the proposed law however. Some representing the photography community worried about unintended consequences of the bill: a 1912 edition of the publication ‘American Photography’ called the bill ‘indefensible’, saying that the law would make photographers and publishers “continually liable to blackmailing suits” – we assume by those claiming to have never given permission.

Images via Etsy listing

It appears the bill was never voted on and died in the Senate. The following year – President Taft would lose an election to Woodrow Wilson – reports of a renewed trade in fake photos of President Wilson in the capital would soon appear.

The Times Leader Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania •  Fri, Mar 7, 1913 Page 3

What if…

Had the law passed it would have been very relevant in the 21st Century, with the rise of digital photography, photoshop and more recently AI enabled image editing.

It would have made a federal crime of removing an object from a photo for instagram – without permission of everyone in it. On the other hand, recent efforts to legislate against fake nude images would be unneeded – those would be illegal already.

Surprisingly, this latter issue was also present in prior centuries: unmentioned in defense of the proposed law, were real cases of ‘photographic slander’ against women: in 1905 a gang was using the threat of “the circulation of indecent trick photographs for the purposes of blackmail.” A 1891 report out of Chicago noted the arrest of a “gang of scamps” selling fake nude images of high society women. (1936 would see a blackmail plot against opera stars)

Fake nudes could have been banned over a century ago – but the law was too broad, focusing on more speculative, rather than specific proven harms. A similar critique is made of some AI regulation proposed today – making this, a good possible lesson for the best way to approach AI regulation.

Side Note: Hypocrisy

A year after the law was proposed – in 1913 – a photo would appear of President Taft atop a Carabao – the national animal of the Philippines. It was thought to have been part of an effort to buy goodwill with a nation seeking independence from the United States:

It turns out, it was the very kind of fake photo the Taft administration was railing against. In 2018 history researcher Bob Couttie discovered a 1908 photo of President Taft astride a horse, in an identical pose: comparing the images it seems undeniable Taft had been cut and pasted onto a different image: literally.

Secretary of War William Howard Taft on a horse, 1908. Via New York Times Archives

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Comments on “The 1912 War On Fake Photos”

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29 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

I was bemused to see, in the images directly from newsletter.pessimistsarchive.org at the top and bottom of the article include the legend

This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please turn on JavaScript or unblock scripts.

Given that I am reading this on Techdirt, this is precisely the sort of reason I use an opt-in JavaScript policy. There is no reason I should be running pessimistsarchive JS while reading this post.

jim says:

Re: Re:

An IFrame is a type of MPEG packet. How does javascript get executed from it?

My point is I’m a techie and I don’t know, nor care, what an iframe in a web browser is, let alone how it runs javascript. I just block JS by default and only put a site on my whitelist after thinking about it and deciding the risk is worth the reward. Hint: 90% the answer is no.

Anonymous Coward says:

I’m a photographer and have taken 10s of thousands of photographs.

One important thing to understand about photographs is that they capture a single instant in time and compress 3 dimensions down to 2. So they inherently lie, even without AI or photoshop.

People will jump to all sorts of conclusions based on false projects of what comes next, or even relative positions of the objects along the third axis.

So I recommend you take even altered photographs with a grain of salt.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
DannyB (profile) says:

Didn't we have this same outrage with Photoshop?

The world didn’t end when Photoshop became popular. Nor did the world end when digital photography became popular.

The world didn’t even end with Polaroid which enabled people to take pictures that wouldn’t be scrutinized by drug store employees developing your pictures.

Anonymous Coward says:

Just because sleazy people have always spread mis/disinformation doesn’t mean we shouldn’t fight it aggressively now that we have the tools and the will to do so.

People who spread propaganda and false claims, hate speech and deepfakes should be held accountable and punished severely to disincentivize that behavior in the future.

Like Tim Walz said, you can’t yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater and our Democracy is under attack from Trump and the fascists who are approx. 50% of the American voting population!

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

I agree with you. Sadly the uppity speech & law types will treat you like trash because you mentioned the fire thing.

If they want people to use something else, then maybe the uppity lawyer types need to come up with another short snappy phrase that also means “A functional society needs to have reasonable limits on rights, including speech rights.”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I’m curious.
What sort of photograph/video modifications to what sort of pictures/videos would meet the criteria for being upset enough to agree to address such things in some manner?

The placing of a face upon a nude body has been in the news, would that apply? Making someone look/sound like they are saying things they did not, would that count?

What about removal of red eye, would that meet the level required for getting upset? Acne? Removal of the person no one likes from the group photo, would that do it?

Where does it stop?

TaboToka (profile) says:

Re: First Amendment Fire

Like Tim Walz said, you can’t yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater

You CAN yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater.

Falsely yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theater is not protected speech:

“…it is a fact that a man in a crowded auditorium, or any theater, who yells “fire” and there is no fire, and a panic ensues and someone is trampled to death, may be rightfully indicted and charged with murder, …” —E. S. Wertz – Debs v. US (1918)

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Falsely yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theater is not protected speech…

Um, yes it is. According to this very website:

Today the standard for what speech can be proscribed is the much narrower one articulated in Brandenburg v. Ohio, which said that speech can only be prosecuted if it is intended to incite “imminent lawless action” (read: a riot).

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Just because sleazy people have always spread mis/disinformation doesn’t mean we shouldn’t fight it aggressively now that we have the tools and the will to do so.

How do you regulate lies?

At the core of this argument about how to handle mis- and disinformation sits an objective fact: They’re lies. Sure, they may be little white lies, or lies of omission, or great big whoppers⁠—but they’re lies all the same. When people use social media, for example, they often use self-chosen screen names that are far from being their government name; that, in a sense, is a lie (albeit one that is hardly on the scale of an AI deepfake).

The core question of regulating mis- and disinformation, then, becomes a question of regulating lies. The First Amendment protects a lot of speech. Hell, it even protects lies (defamation notwithstanding). To give the government any power over regulating mis- and disinformation would require an approach that carves out an incredibly specific subset of speech while leaving all other speech that the law already protects. Therein lies the secondary questions: Who gets to carve, and how do they decide what to carve?

Consider, for a moment, the notion of satire. The Onion is a satirical outlet; it makes no attempt to hide this fact. But it has published articles that managed to fool people into believing the articles were genuine instead of satirical. One can argue that successful satire is a form of misinformation⁠—a lie, if you will. If an outlet like The Onion can be credibly accused of putting out misinformation, how could lawmakers craft a law meant to curb the spread of misinformation that also exempts The Onion? (And if you’re of a different political bent: Substitute The Babylon Bee for The Onion.)

Regulating lies also requires the regulation of truth. Give that power to someone whose politics agrees with yours and you’ll probably be fine with that. But I doubt you’d agree with someone like, say, Donald Trump getting the power to say “anyone who says I lost in 2020 is lying and their lies should be banned from all social media”. You can’t give the power to regulate what is and isn’t the truth only to the people with whose politics you agree.

I’m sympathetic to the issue of mis- and disinformation being a huge problem in the AI Age. I would gladly sign on to some sort of regulation that requires the accurate labelling of such content. But the idea of banning it altogether brings me back to the questions I asked earlier, and I don’t see a way to ban mis- and disinformation without also banning a lot of otherwise permissible speech. If you have a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer, feel free to explain the exact cut you’d make that would take out the toxic speech and leave all other speech intact.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Ok, what would you recommend? Should there be a panel of experts in the field convened in order to develop/evaluate potential solutions? Would this become another federal bureaucracy that future MAGAs will try to destroy?

Not sure there have been any real world suggestions to address the ill defined problem.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Should there be a panel of experts in the field convened in order to develop/evaluate potential solutions?

If it weren’t for fascists in the media and Congress, the Disinformation Governance Board would be operating effectively and policing speech-based threats to Democracy.

Nina Jankowicz was the hero we needed 🙁

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