My son has been taking photos since a young age, and I for one saw him take this marvellous shot. He has amazing talent, and if you're jealous then leave him alone.
and the file name is "images" i think if it's a SOOC then it should be "DSC456" something like that... or if he has renamed it to "images" which i think is not smart... you never title your own work images for you know, yourself, what's the meaning of the photo.. and yet, it's "images"
and yeah the dad and friend thingy.... LOL
this is how mine looks like in the "VIEW EXIT INFO"
and this is his
i know some looks like this as well but ermmmm he's a newbie right? i dont even know how to "secure" your exit info so that people won't see the setting u have when u took the photo... and ermmmmmm he doesn't have an info about the camera he used... tsk tsk
@maceugenio when you steal images, exif into does not exist. However, then same thing happens when you upload a collage of your own original images, like my photo for today was. it is because the image you are making is actual an image of the photos, not the photo files themself.
LOL! I saw this when it was 1st put up but didn't comment because I soo thought it was stolen but didn't know how to prove it. So glad that was cleared up.
That picture had 18 hits in TinEye
http://www.flickr.com/photos/stevewall/524803118/
FAIL!!!!
what I find amusing is how he claimed it was his friend that was with him when he took it but his "dad" claims he was the one there.
@suzk I'm sure the response to that will be "Oh but my dad IS my friend" lol
and the file name is "images" i think if it's a SOOC then it should be "DSC456" something like that... or if he has renamed it to "images" which i think is not smart... you never title your own work images for you know, yourself, what's the meaning of the photo.. and yet, it's "images"
and yeah the dad and friend thingy.... LOL
this is how mine looks like in the "VIEW EXIT INFO"
and this is his
i know some looks like this as well but ermmmm he's a newbie right? i dont even know how to "secure" your exit info so that people won't see the setting u have when u took the photo... and ermmmmmm he doesn't have an info about the camera he used... tsk tsk
in this case, clearly clearly stolen.
Come at me