Article 4ANTJ Man, angry at likeness being used to show that hipsters all look the same, learns it's not him in the photo

Man, angry at likeness being used to show that hipsters all look the same, learns it's not him in the photo

by
Rob Beschizza
from on (#4ANTJ)
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A man was angry that a photo of him was used to illustrate the claim that hipsters all look alike. But when he threatened to sue the magazine, he learned that the photo was of a different person.

The story in the MIT Technology Review detailed a study about the so-called hipster effect - "the counterintuitive phenomenon in which people who oppose mainstream culture all end up looking the same."

The inclusion of version of a Getty Images photo of a bearded, flannel-wearing man, tinted with a blue and orange hue, prompted one reader to write to the magazine: "Your lack of basic journalistic ethics in both the manner in which you 'reported' this uncredited nonsense, and the slanderous, unnecessary use of my picture without permission demands a response, and I am, of course, pursuing legal action."

But it wasn't actually him.

A few days ago we ran a piece in @techreview about some research purporting to explain the "hipster effect"-the fact that nonconformists often end up nonconforming in the same way. We used a stock Getty photo of a hipster-ish-looking man. https://t.co/8LB6qLSmgS

- Gideon Lichfield (@glichfield) March 6, 2019

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