It's just an artifact of the digital panoramic shot. They're all over the place in that picture; look at the base of the monument and the little pyramid structure just to the right of it (just a few more at a glance).
Funny the artifacting doesn't effect the sky which seamlessly falls behind those mountains. This can not be explained using a stitched together panorama, nor a true 3d camera rig. This shows intentional manipulation, unlike the six wheeled cars in google street view.
What's funnier is I've seen this same artifact on several of my phone cameras. Background unaffected, foreground repeating things. Probably has something to do with the depth of field why some things get copied and some don't.
OP is confidently incorrect and unable to be deterred. Let the little guy have his day. What's he gonna do? Fly to the coordinates and take his own pic?
It's just an artifact of the digital panoramic shot. They're all over the place in that picture; look at the base of the monument and the little pyramid structure just to the right of it (just a few more at a glance).
Funny the artifacting doesn't effect the sky which seamlessly falls behind those mountains. This can not be explained using a stitched together panorama, nor a true 3d camera rig. This shows intentional manipulation, unlike the six wheeled cars in google street view.
What's funny is you don't know anything about the camera setup yet confidently have expectations on how it should perform.
What this shows is that you need more information.
What's funnier is I've seen this same artifact on several of my phone cameras. Background unaffected, foreground repeating things. Probably has something to do with the depth of field why some things get copied and some don't.
OP is confidently incorrect and unable to be deterred. Let the little guy have his day. What's he gonna do? Fly to the coordinates and take his own pic?
I have ruled out the only two camera setups and errors that could account for this. no more is needed.