View this email in your browser
Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Storehouse photo misused by masked sellers

Last fall, I told you about the rise of deepfakes, seamlessly doctored videos in which artificial intelligence is used to create a fake event, like replacing a person in an existing video with someone else.

Of course, 21st century technology doesn’t mean people will give up on old-fashioned means of deception.

This spring, several groups took a photo from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, cropped it and used it as their own. They even said they were selling what was in the photograph.

Here’s what happened:

You’ll remember that on Jan. 29, church workers loaded boxes with 220,000 N95 respirator masks and other personal protective equipment bound for a children’s hospital in Asia onto pallets at the Utah Bishops’ Central Storehouse on the west side of Salt Lake City. I was there, and I wrote about the donation and the forklift drivers who moved 67 pallets of protective gear onto trucks, which hauled them to the airport for the overseas flight.

The delivery arrived successfully, but within weeks, several groups had misappropriated a photo of the boxes from an official church website, cropped the photo and began to use it to say they were selling those boxes of masks, which was not true.

The full original photo, which I’ve provided below, shows the forklift operator lifting a pallet of boxes marked with the 3M logo and containing N95 respirator masks. The cropped, misappropriated photo cuts out the forklift and its operator. One yellow portion of the forklift can still be seen in the bottom left of the frame of the “borrowed” image.

The website Talking Points Memo posted a story about the deception last month. One outfit used the photo to say the boxes in the image contained 300 million N95 masks. The group said it could broker a deal between a Japanese company that allegedly had them and the U.S. government, which desperately needed them.


“That’s the nature of this market, there’s so much uncertainty,” the would-be broker told Talking Points Memo, admitting he erred. “Ninety or 95% of all deals are scams.”

In fact, the same photo was used by another seller on eBay and Facebook.
My Recent Stories

President Nelson: Church leaders will ‘cautiously move forward’ in decisions about temples, meetinghouses (May 6, 2020) 

Can you sew a mask? ProjectProtect still needs 2,700 more volunteers by Tuesday (May 4, 2020) 

Separated by pandemic, women gather virtually for BYU Women’s Conference digital event (May 1, 2020) 

Church donates $5.5 million as it expands COVID-19 relief projects (April 30, 2020) 

Final Hill Cumorah Pageant postponed until 2021, church announces (April 30, 2020) 


Latter-day Saint youth camps closed indefinitely; other activities canceled or on hold, church announces (April 30, 2020) 

What I’m Reading ...

On Sunday, ComeUntoChrist.org launched an “online journey” called “Walk With Christ,” inviting you to sign up for a series of 10 emails describing events in the life of Jesus Christ. Sign up here.

The Church News has published a two-part series talking to missionaries who returned home during the pandemic. The challenges they have faced and are facing will have an interesting effect on the church in the coming decades, I think.

Here’s a great gathering of short stories and photos about health care workers on the front lines of the pandemic.

This is for baseball lovers. It’s about a crazy trick play in which a baserunner ran into the outfield attempting to force the defense into a mistake. The trick play is called “skunk in the outfield.”

My wonderful mother sang the Danny Kaye lullaby “Loo! Loo! Loo! I’ll Take You Dreaming” from the film “The Court Jester” to us as children. I looked it up again this week and learned that it was co-written by Kaye’s wife, Sylvia Fine. I also found the music and lyrics are stored in the Library of Congress. Watch Kaye sing it in the movie here.

Behind the Scenes

The original photo of a church worker moving boxes with 200,000 N95 respirator masks for delivery to a children’s hospital in China. This photo was taken by an official church photographer and posted on the Church Newsroom website in January.
This cropped image from of the original photo has been used improperly by several companies and others purporting to have millions of N95 masks for sale.
Like receiving news in your inbox? Sign up for another free Deseret News newsletter.
Want to see your company or product advertised in our newsletters? Click here.
Twitter
Website
Email
Instagram
Copyright © 2020 Deseret News, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up on our website.

Our mailing address is:
Deseret News
55 N 300 W
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp