How can you trust that a news photograph is real? We looked into the future of investigative journalism — by looking into the past.
Thirty years after a death squad massacred civilians in a small town in Eastern Bosnia, Rolling Stone partnered with the Starling Lab to help archive and authenticate key records of the violence.
American photographer Ron Haviv was in Bijeljina on April 2, 1992. One of his photos from that day went viral. But in the decades since, people have questioned and manipulated the image.
Now, a groundbreaking digital archive provides access to photos, videos, social media posts, and documents from our reporting on the massacre. This is the result of an 11-month collaboration between Rolling Stone and the Starling Lab. Co-founded by Stanford University and the USC Shoah Foundation, Starling Lab created and implemented the cryptographic framework for the archive and contributed additional digital and in-field research for the investigation.
Get the full story at: https://investigation.rollingstone.co...
Visit the USC Shoah Foundation on YouTube / @uscshoahfoundation
0:00 - Ron Haviv on his role as a photographer
1:13 - How Haviv got his photos of Arkan’s Tigers
5:33 - Misinformation and disinformation in photography
7:19 - How to authenticate a photograph
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