
It makes one think about the power of so-called leaks to draw attention to a product. So how can readers tell a real leak from a Photoshop-happy bogus leak? Back in early 2007 there were rumors on the web about what would become the Olympus E-3 pro DSLR. The source was a PDF presentation hosted on a photo site, and this was picked up by CNET among others. It was detailed and appeared to be legitimate (Japanese-English and all). This report made the rounds of digital photography message boards and blogs. It had a lot of information that made it appear as though it were from Olympus (and therefore authentic). It was also taken down by sites that had hosted it and were contacted by Olympus to remove it.
Because Olympus moved to remove the post, it had instant validity, and when the camera was officially launched, it proved to have been accurate information. Still, the fact that it was leaked information caused the E-3 news to build incredible anticipation for the real product. So, the lessons learned: if a leak is just a Photoshopped image, it's probably bogus. But if a company takes measures to have a site remove the content and the content is detailed, then the leak is probably real.