Photographer Gaurav Agrawal was surprised when he learned from the news that his stunning photo of St. Mary Lake that he took last summer at the National Park in Montana can destroy countless Android smartphones.

If users set the image as a background on smartphones running the Android 10 operating system, the phones will start to work and stop frequently, which requires a factory reset, which means that all the data on it will be erased.

"I didn't do anything on purpose ... I am sad because people have suffered because of the picture," Agrawal told the BBC website.

It appears that the image, which has been modified in Adobe Lightroom and uploaded to the Flickr platform for images, does not cause any problems on iPhones. But due to a small error while exporting the image, this beautiful image has become devastating to some brands of phones running Android OS 10.

Color spaces

The picture was taken with Nikon's own camera, and then the photographer made a small adjustment using the Adobe Lightroom editing program that provides three color options to download the final result, and it appears that this option is causing a bug in some Android phones.

Agrawal chose to upload the image in RGB format, which is the color model that Android 10 phones could not handle because it can deal with the most common sRGB standard, and Dylan Russell, Android developer, explained that this color space has It is not supported on certain devices and said, "It is the way the phone knows how to display the perfect perfect shade of green, for example."

"What happened here is that the way some phones handle these cases is different, the phone might hang because it doesn't know how to handle it properly, and developers might not have thought about this," Russell added.

The photographer, who has more than 10,000 followers on the Flickr photography platform, and who previously published his work in the National Geographic magazine, says he was not aware of the bug because he had never tried it, and he added, "I didn't know the formula would do that ... I have an iPhone, And the background of my phone is always my wife's picture. "