Moderated by: chrisbet,
The day after tomorrow  Rate Topic 
AuthorPost

Posted by Eric: Sat Sep 13th, 2014 10:34 1st Post
Came across a weird effect last week.

A pro photographer sent me some images for use in a publication, for a mutual client.

All the mages had been taken on the same day and copyright encrypted. It was a Canon image...which may or may not be relevant.

When I came to use them one image crashed my system. In fact it corrupted the whole publication rendering it unopenable.

Needless to say I tried various tricks, involving resaving, tweaking in Photoshop. Every time it crashed my publishing programme. In fact, I used the file in two different publications using two different software packages....it corrupted them both.

(I won't mention the swear words required to rebuild the publication from TOO old backups!)


On examination the file had TOMORROWS date in the exif.
The other 4 images had YESTERDAYS date. A two day difference despite being shot at the same time?

I cunningly put aside the work for a couple of days...in the belief that the encrypted date would be safely passed and useable by then.

Wrong....the b*gger corrupted the files again. (fortunately newer backups prevented more reconstruction work)


So I am left thinking that a more significant corruption had been embedded and the wrong date was just a symptom.

The strange thing is, it opened ok in photoshop ...it was only when I placed it elsewhere, the problem came out.

o.O

Sorry guys ...wasn't sure which section to post this.



____________________
Eric


Posted by jk: Sat Sep 13th, 2014 10:55 2nd Post
Eric, Have you tried adjusting the date in the EXIF using something like EXIFUtils.
It could be that someone has put this in as a copy protection mechanism.
I guess that the file is too big to share but anyway I am out for the next few days so couldnt do any work on it until Monday.



____________________
Still learning after all these years!
https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none


Posted by Eric: Sat Sep 13th, 2014 11:37 3rd Post
jk wrote:
Eric, Have you tried adjusting the date in the EXIF using something like EXIFUtils.
It could be that someone has put this in as a copy protection mechanism.
I guess that the file is too big to share but anyway I am out for the next few days so couldnt do any work on it until Monday.


Don't think it was deliberate The other images of the same machine, taken on the same day with the correct date, are fine.

I found a way round it....didn't use the image. Lol

Gone to press now ....so not bothered. Just wondered if anyone had encountered similar.



____________________
Eric


Posted by jk: Sat Sep 13th, 2014 11:51 4th Post
I have encountered similar effects but only if the image is corrupt in some way.



____________________
Still learning after all these years!
https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none


Posted by Eric: Sat Sep 13th, 2014 12:36 5th Post
jk wrote:
I have encountered similar effects but only if the image is corrupt in some way.
It opened ok and looked ok....apart from the fact it was a cr*p shooting angle and composition he had chosen. Lol

It was a relief NOT to use it.

:lol:



____________________
Eric

Reply
1st new
This is topic ID = 1095  
Nikon DSLR Forums > Computer Hardware for Digital Photography. Computers, OS, Scanners, etc. > Hardware for Image Processing > The day after tomorrow Top

Users viewing this topic

Post quick reply

Current theme is Blue



A small amount of member data is captured and held in an attempt to reduce spammers and to manage users. This site also uses cookies to ensure ease of use. In order to comply with new DPR regulations you are required to agree/disagree with this process. If you do not agree then please email the Admins using info@nikondsl.uk Thank you.


Hosted by Octarine Services

UltraBB 1.173 Copyright © 2008-2024 Data 1 Systems
Page processed in 0.0320 seconds (76% database + 24% PHP). 57 queries executed.