When someone says “do not do this”, many are tempted to do the opposite. And that’s exactly what happened when user @IceUniverse tweeted about an image that reportedly could ruin your phone.
It was on May 21, 2020 that the user Ice Universe posted the mythical picture on Twitter.
In his tweet he wrote:
“Warning!!! Never set this picture as wallpaper, especially for Samsung mobile phone users! It will cause your phone to crash! Don’t try it! If someone sends you this picture, please ignore it. ”
His post quickly spread on Twitter and, perhaps not entirely unexpectedly, the warning also had the opposite effect on many. The post received many responses, such as “Time to change background” and “Are you serious? I have to test this right away ”.
On May 31, the user tweeted again:
“This is not a joke, please do not try, I hope someone can understand its crash mechanism to avoid the harm of such wallpapers to the phone. Please developers to study it.”
To the great displeasure of many, the user Ice Universe spoke the truth. Over 2000 users answered that they had problems with their phone after downloading the wallpaper. People with versions of Android and Google phones seemed to be the ones affected by the destructive power of the image. This quickly became a mystery that many on the internet wanted to solve.
There were also many who testified that it was possible to use the image without problems. However, it soon became apparent that many of those who had managed to use the image were those who had taken a screenshot of the image or not downloaded it in its original version.
At first, people thought that this was an image that someone had deliberately manipulated, in order to destroy phones. But this was not the case. The image was a regular image, taken to be a wallpaper and had the correct resolution and size.
However, people who had taken a screenshot of the image did not get the problem. Even people who had downloaded the file from some social media could use the image without any problems. Therefore, many came to the conclusion that the problem lay in the image file itself and began to investigate it. They soon discovered that some social media reduces the image range and luminance in the image and that is why it could be used if you downloaded it from, for example, Weibo.
The problem was in the color profile, its scope is larger than what some phones can handle. The picture was taken in sRGB but then exported to ProPhoto RGB. Many social media do not handle that color profile and automatically converted the image back to sRGB, something that made the image look a little darker and flatter but also made the file harmless.
But Android should be able to convert ProPhoto RGB to sRBG, so the solution was not really that simple either. Believe it or not, the problem lay in a single pixel of the image. This specific pixel had a color with too much luminance for Google to convert the image from ProPhoto RGB to sRGB.
So it was a pitiful little pixel in the picture that has destroyed thousands of phones around the world. Thus, it was not that image itself that was haunted, but the problem could theoretically be recreated in other images. We can only hope that developers keep track of the problem and solve it, so we do not have to ruin our phones when we have to look at pictures of sunsets.