Dana Scully and Fox Mulder from X-files would say 'Truth is out there’ but this photo is nowhere close to the truth as it is not the photo of an alien.
20 fake photos that went viral and fooled us!
Possibility in an X-Men movie but it is scientifically impossible to for your eyes ever look like this.
This could be worse than a bomb scare if your pilots start doing this when you are on board. Thankfully, this photo isn’t real.
We know that there is this notion that India is land of elephants and snake charmers. However, a quick google search will show you that no such species of snake exists. It is completely photoshopped.
When this picture first went viral, it was said that it was a picture of US President Barack Obama’s college days. Turns out it is not!
You may want this photo to be real, but it’s not. The castle and the rock are two different photos which are combined together. The castle is situated in Germany while the rock is part of Thailand.
A phone or a laptop that falls in water could be saved, but this photo is fake. We are still unaware of any new innovation in which CPU floating under water would make your desktop work.
Venice had its share of winters, but it was never as bad as shown in the photo.
This photo shows Sphinx covered in snow, but in reality it a miniature set that was part of a series to showcase monuments in Egypt covered in snow after a freak storm.
It's no freak of nature, this blue coloured watermelon is photoshopped.
This is a fake photo of tsunami hitting Japan.
While the National Geographic crew is actually running in the picture, the bear is from a stock photo.
This beautiful creature looks magnificent but sadly is not real.
This viral photograph was staged by a Syrian photographer who used his nephew to take this photo in Saudi Arabia.
In the photo it seems like the kid is sleeping in betweenthe graves of his parents. While this picture may not be true, the reality is that migrant crisis is ripping families.
This eerie photo which has been shared over a million times since it was first ‘created’ is no miracle just photoshop.
Almost all Indians on Whats App have received this photo during the festival of Diwali. It is said that this is a photo taken by NASA of what India looks like during Diwali.
Well, that’s not true. NASA has the answer and the answer is no. The light produced during Diwali is so scattered and weak that the space images don’t show it.
According to NASA: In reality, any extra light produced during Diwali is so subtle that it is likely imperceptible when observed from space. The fake image being circulated each year repeatedly on social networking sites and other internet websites is from the U.S. Defence Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) satellites. It was created by NOAA to highlight the population growth over the time. It’s not even a single photo, it’s a combination of many photographs and data collected over the years. In this image white areas show city lights that were visible before 1992, while blue, green, and red shades show city lights that became visible in 1992, 1998, and 2003.
This could be scene from an apocalypse movie.
A couple's romantic getaway turned ugly when the husband was ambushed by a shark – it would have been a tragic tale had the photo not been a fake and the man was actually not swimming in a pool.
This photo got popular as Fairy Isles of Scotland with pink surroundings. But in reality it is a photoshopped image of Shotover River in New Zealand which had natural green surroundings.
Such enormous manta ray do exist. But this photo of Captain A L Kahn taken in 1933 with a giant manta is a fake.