A rogue employee at Minnesota-based yearbook company Lifetouch National School Studios decided to pull a prank using Photoshop to 30 different student photos.
Changes included switched heads, stretched necks, a missing arm and a blurry, nude body replacement.
Best of all, the yearbooks were printed and delivered.
Implications - The spokeswoman for Lifetouch National School Studios Inc. explained that the incident was "an unfortunate lapse in judgment." She also stated that the employee did not play the prank for malicious reasons and was obviously fired.
Although the prank must have embarrassed some of the students, it was rather funny! It's a good thing the company re-printed the yearbooks without the graffiti for all of the students.
Photoshopping Pranks
Yearbook Employee Alters 30 Students, Hillarity Ensues
Trend Themes
1. Prank Culture - Companies may benefit from promoting a culture of harmless pranks and creativity among employees to create a more fun and engaged workplace environment.
2. Image Manipulation Technology - New advancements in image manipulation technology may lead to revolutionary new products that automate and simplify photo editing and alteration processes.
3. Student Privacy Concerns - This incident may spark conversations about the importance of protecting students' privacy, and lead to new policies and security protocols in schools and yearbook companies.
Industry Implications
1. Photography - Photography companies must stay up to date on the latest image manipulation technology and ensure they have strong ethical standards in place for employee conduct.
2. Education - The incident may cause schools and education companies to re-evaluate their data privacy policies and strengthen measures to detect and prevent similar incidents.
3. Publishing - Publishing companies must balance the desire for humor and creativity with respect for privacy and ethical responsibility in order to maintain trust among customers and stakeholders.