Real exclusive photos (like from Filmfare or Vogue ) have subtle copyright watermarks. Fakes often have exaggerated digital noise or fake watermarks saying "Exclusive: Do not crop." This is a psychological trick to make you think it is valuable. Part 4: The Malicious Intent – Why Are People Making These? It is easy to laugh at a bad fake. But the ecosystem of "all fake photos" serves three dark purposes in the entertainment industry.
Websites with names like "BollywoodLiveToday.net" generate thousands of articles titled "Kajol Devgan's bedroom photos leaked (18+)" . You click. The photo is a blurry fake. But in the 30 seconds you spend trying to see if it is real, the website serves you 12 malware pop-ups and makes $0.03. Scale that to a million clicks, and they profit. all fake fucking photos of kajol devgan exclusive
In the golden era of Bollywood in the 1990s, seeing a photograph of a star like Kajol meant buying a physical magazine. The image was static, tangible, and real . Fast forward three decades, and the landscape of celebrity journalism has collapsed into a chaotic swamp of pixels, prompts, and programmers. Real exclusive photos (like from Filmfare or Vogue
By Rhea Chakraborty | Senior Digital Forensics & Entertainment Correspondent It is easy to laugh at a bad fake
Disclaimer: This article is an educational piece on digital forensics in media. All examples of "fakes" are hypothetical descriptions of known scam tactics. Kajol Devgan has no affiliation with the fraudulent sites mentioned herein.