Subj : Epstein Files: Classic Disinformation? To : All From : roman Date : Sun Dec 21 2025 14:24:58 This is my personal opinion, and I do not insist on it. I am simply sharing my observations here. What is presented to us as photographs from Epstein's archive is classic disinformation. It is the product of inept work by hired PR technologists under 30 years old. In these documents, as has already become evident to me, real photographs are mixed with images that have been photoshopped or involve doubles. Thousands of media outlets reproducing this nonsense fail to see the obvious: the photos depict two different Clintons. This is a primitive forgery. If we are talking about genuine photographs from the late 1990s to early 2000s, professional editing of that era, done for such purposes, would be flawless and indistinguishable to the untrained eye even today. But what we see here is so amateurish that it either was hastily assembled or is an intentional "trace" meant to later claim falsification and discredit the entire Epstein story. In one photo, there is a person with natural, familiar facial expressions, consistent with their age and anatomy - ears and jawline are normal. In another, the character's facial features appear distorted, as if stretched over a digital mannequin (such as in the Jackson photo) or, for example, a shot in a hot tub. This is especially noticeable in the jawline and the placement of the ear, which do not match the previous images. Many high-profile figures have used look-alikes (doubles) for years to divert attention, test security routes, or craft a public image while they are elsewhere. Epstein, as a master of blackmail and orchestrator of "services," likely knew about this practice and used it for his clients' benefit. When Epstein's so-called archive was seized, the operation's handlers needed to secure it. They selected several real photos featuring doubles - such as a person resembling Clinton but with anatomical differences. Authentic professional editing for such purposes would have been done with expensive, inaccessible tools - possibly even at a government level - and would leave no obvious traces. The use of "shoddy" Photoshop, detectable even by ordinary users like myself, is a clear mark of amateur work. Some of these fakes are evidently generated by AI tools but stylized to look like late 90s or early 2000s photographs - note the bottles, tableware, and other small details. What year there is it? Damn it, we're not amnesiacs; we also lived through in the late 90s and early 2000s. These are deliberately forged images pretending to be scans of old photos. A real public figure's wrinkles form over decades; they are a unique facial fingerprint. In the "Jackson" version, these folds are unnaturally deep and sharp, as if drawn with a primitive "scratching" tool in basic editing software. Jackson has died, right? No one can ask him? These images do not mimic natural expressions; they are static, like masks. Pay attention to skin texture: in one photo, the skin appears alive, with red pores, capillaries, fine wrinkles, and uneven tone. In another (the photo with Clinton in shirts in the center), there is a perfectly blurred reddish plastic sphere, as if a "Surface Blur" filter or something similar with exaggerated settings was applied to hide inconsistencies in lighting and shadow. The lighting in these images is inconsistent - one source from the left, another from above right? This is basic design student level, not "secret archive" quality. Look at the bottles in the hot tub or on the yacht. Yes, their shapes could vary, but the barcode or label? They are poorly stitched, at unnatural angles. The label doesn't match the cylindrical shape of the bottle. Were such bottles in real? And most importantly, the print quality: in the 2000s, labels weren't so faded and perfectly printed. This looks like modern digital printing, simply copied from a Google image and stretched onto a 3D model of a bottle. They didn't even bother to scan real textured paper with grain; they took a digital fake and added noise and scratches - something. I can do too, to create retro-style photos! But they did it mindlessly. Scratches and pixels overlay all objects, including people. A real film scratch would be beneath the image layer; here, the girl in the foreground appears over "historical scratches" (like from PhotoFiltre 2008?), which pass over her body - this is also an obvious mistake. Regarding clothing - where they are not naked - modern AI generators when still struggle with complex textures like lace, knitted patterns, or burlap. These often blur into a mess. Examine the clothing in questionable frames: where texture should be, there are blurry pixel elements. And why is everything so dark? In the 90s, we already had camera flashes! It seems that after assembling this collage, it should have been color-corrected, adjusted for contrast and sharpness. But they failed at that too. You can see patches with different sharpness and color noise - one person is sharp, another blurry; one has "noise" from high ISO, another is perfectly clean. It's like combining two different photos from different cameras, which is unlikely for a single archive. It feels like children who've never shot on film edited these images. On old digital photos, if they are digital at all (because I can't even tell what I'm seeing), there are often color fringes (purple, green) around objects. In these fakes, they are either absent or poorly added with crooked "Lens Correction" filters, visible where they shouldn't be. In group photos, shadows from people should fall in the same direction. In the most dubious images, shadows are inconsistent: one person's shadow points left, another's right - clear evidence of editing. They took images from different sources, shot at different times of day, and simply cut out the characters. Either they are complete idiots or have never photographed or processed old film images. This is pure disinformation aimed at fools, created by people under 30. When this matter reaches court, lawyers will display these lousy photos on a big screen and argue: "Your Honor, we will provide an expert analysis proving this is primitive photo manipulation. Shadows do not match, anatomical features differ. Consequently, the entire so-called 'archive' is compromised and cannot be considered evidence." The media will immediately pick up: "The court dismissed Epstein-related evidence, declaring it falsified." And that will be the end. The genuine, shocking images that might have been stored in the curators' archives - if they ever existed - will never see the light of day because they will be overshadowed by these pathetic forgeries. --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64) * Origin: Shipwrecks & Shibboleths [San Francisco, CA - USA] (700:100/72) .