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are unlikely to mislead a consumer.

      Visual Appropriation

      Visual appropriation, the intentional borrowing, copying, and alteration of preexisting images and objects, is a strategy long used by artists. For example, in 1962 Andy Warhol painted images of the Campbell's tomato soup can. It led to a great debate about the ethics of such work, and appropriation remains an ethical gray area today.

Schematic illustration of original image inspiring the Rubio photoshop.

       Figure 2.7 Original image inspiring the Rubio photoshop.

       Source: Aaron Alex / Alamy Stock Photo.

Schematic illustration of photoshopped image of Marco Rubio.

       Figure 2.8 Photoshopped image of Marco Rubio.

       Source: https://www.youtube.com/embed/uKcQoFSVvGQ?feature=oembed, Ted Cruz.

      Mashups and Remixes

      Mashups or remixes are now common, and some say they are simply new cultural practices enabled by technology. Vidding, or editing and adding to existing video footage, may be used to comment, satirize, or to offer a fresh perspective on an event or viewpoint. This brings up both legal and ethical implications. Is it proper to use materials that someone else has created? In addition, what legal policies may be applicable to these situations? In these cases, copyright and “fair use” laws are in play. Copyright laws are intended to protect writers, photographers, and videographers from having their work stolen or used inappropriately. It also protects their rights to be compensated (Brooks et al., 2020). However, rules regarding fair use of copyrighted materials allow others to use small portions of those materials when they are properly attributed. In this book, our use of others' work and ideas are examples of fair use or copyrighted use has been sought and granted. Images, especially in the age of digital work, present ever more complex ethical questions.

      Homages

      However, imagine if an individual substantially altered the Obama “Hope” poster, animating it, inserting new characters, settings, or backgrounds. Does it then become a different creation, possibly with copyright protection itself? What if it is then disseminated on social media? Noted visual theorist William J. Mitchell (1994) suggests that easily replicable visual images have profoundly changed how we interact with those images both individual and societally.

      We might best regard digital images, then, neither as ritual objects (as religious paintings have served) nor as objects of mass consumption … but as fragments of information that circulate in high‐speed networks now ringing the globe that can be received, transformed, and recombined like DNA to produce new intellectual structures having their own dynamics and value

       (Mitchell 1994, pp. 53–54).

      Mitchell and others point out how easily manipulated and shared images seem to have less and less relationship with an “external referent” (p. 55) or to be mirrors of what we think of as our everyday reality. Visuals are never just neutral representations of the world. Instead, they are interpretations that may have different meanings for different people and, intentionally or unintentionally, “argue” for a certain point of view.

      LO3 Apply strategies for evaluating the ethics of visual communication that you or others create.

      Earlier in this chapter, in the section on Pluralism, you read that Ross's first duty is fidelity or the responsibility to keep promises, be truthful, and fulfill contracts and obligations. That means we shouldn't lie. However, another one of Ross's duties is non‐injury: our responsibility to avoid hurting other people physically, emotionally, or psychologically.

      Unintended Effects

      Thus, the duty to do no harm and duty for beneficence come into conflict and the multiple duties of public health professionals and those creating the campaign arise. According to Wilkins (2016), Ross's typology encourages us to look at the specifics and the context of circumstances and decide which duty outweighs the others in a given situation.

      FOCUS: Rethinking Diversity in Visual Narratives

      A video series by the nonprofit iBiology showcases researchers who represent overlooked groups. “Background to Breakthrough” features Latino Estaban Burchard's journey from growing up in a poor, single parent home to his adult life as a health expert on asthma. The video's unique perspective frames Burchard not as a marginalized survivor, but rather as an creative achiever drawing from his valuable life experience to become a world‐renowned researcher and tenured professor at the University of California, San Francisco.

      While many narratives about scientists from underrepresented backgrounds present an “underdog” story, iBiology believes they are stale, overused, and lack contextual depth.

      This “surviving the odds” storyline does not fairly represent the scientists and science itself; rather, it is one dimensional. It diminishes the

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