Spyke
infosec.pub

Technically false. Digital images are made up of pixels like this:

which reproduce colors by adjusting the intensity of the red, green and blue light in each pixel. If nothing else, every white pixel in the image contains a full-brightness red segment.

24
lemmy.world

Some of that white is not as white as the others. There's definitely a reddish tone of you zoom in.

21

I find that reddish tint foes away if I zoom in and block out the teal parts

4

Yeah probably jpeg compression muddying it up. That combined with another comment about white pixels containing red makes me think that this illusion was intended to be printed out.

4

It's just less teal spots, not much redder, especially not as .uch as perceived

First two are from the centre, the last is not

1

maybe because I am color blind, but I am only seeing the blue and some white.

3
lemmy.world

Is my brain broken? Why do I not see any red? Should I be?

3

I'd say it's rather an indicator of the person who's had too much exposure to the previous marketing. Also neurodivergence may work against this illusion the way it breaks some of the others

1

This is a lesson white balance. If you white balance on the bright color in the non-can section, suddenly the can has more red than blue or green. So relatively, there is more red in the can area of the photo than the other area of the photo, and your brain is adjusting to the tint of the image.

1

You reached the end

There is no red in this picture | Spyke