ISIS Are Now Stealing Your Photos And Using Them As Propaganda

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Brian McCarty/WarToys

In 2012, photographer Brian McCarty took a series of photographs in Gaza as part of his WAR-TOYS Project, exploring war from the perspective of children who have to live in it every day.

However, McCarty saw an altered version of his work, the Cinderella doll replaced with an ISIS flag. He posted the image on Facebook and some of his Arabic speaking friends told him it was actually ISIS propaganda.

Speaking to Hyperallergenic McCarty said:

I’m not happy about [commercial theft], but I’ve had to get pretty thick-skinned. The ISIS theft is something completely different and far more disturbing.

The manipulated image shows the ISIS black flag protecting an open Koran inside a bubble with text reading, “Even if war destroys everything, the Islamic sign and state is protected and will never fall down.”

Pixsy

According to Hyperallergenic most use of the image traces back to August 2014, when McCarty says it started spreading through extremist-linked Twitter feeds. When he first found it, he contacted Daniel Foster, founder of Pixsy – a modern copyright management tool for photographers – who consulted a friend with a background in international law.

“They agreed that there were some legal options in international courts, but any victory would be symbolic,” says McCarty. “I could never accept any money from a terrorist organisation, even if I used every dime of it to fund art therapy programs for refugees around the world.”

Brian McCarty/WarToys

However, Foster was successful in getting the image removed from sites like Twitter and Blogspot, but it was the immorality of the act that most affected McCarty:

They took a little girl’s very real fear of war and turned it into something promoting extremist beliefs—ones at the core of unspeakable amounts of death and suffering.