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Nothing caught using stock photos as Phone 3 camera samples

Photographers confirm Nothing Phone 3 samples were not shot on the device.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Aug 30, 2025, 2:17 AM EDT
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Nothing Phone 3 promotional image with hashtag #WithNothing, showing sample photos including a luxury interior reflection in a mirror, a black-and-white portrait of a woman in a headscarf, a vintage car headlight, a glass of drink casting a shadow, and a person leaning out of a carved traditional building window.
Stock photos from Nothing phone 3 demo unit. (Screenshot: GadgetBond)
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When shoppers picked up a Nothing Phone 3 in a store recently, one of the demo screens invited them to “Judge for yourself. Here’s what our community has captured with Phone (3).” The pictures on show — a spiral staircase, a car headlight, a drinking glass, a window and a woman looking toward the camera — looked like the sort of glossy, pro-level shots phone makers like to parade around to sell camera chops. The problem was: those images weren’t taken with a Phone 3. They were licensed stock photos shot on proper cameras and, in at least a couple of cases, taken back in 2023 — long before the Phone 3 existed.

Nothing Phone 3 demo display showing a collage of five sample photos including a spiral staircase, a woman in black and white portrait, a vintage car headlight, a glass of drink, and a traditional building window.
Stock photos from the Nothing Phone 3 demo unit. (Screenshot: GadgetBond)

How the demo got outed

The story began with a tip and a screen recording from a retail demo unit in New Zealand. A photographer who recognised one of the images reached out to reporters and, working with journalists, provided an EXIF file that showed the photo’s original camera and timestamp — evidence that the image pre-dated the Phone 3 and wasn’t captured on the device being demoed. That led to further checks: all five pictures shown on the demo can be licensed from the Stills marketplace, and at least one of the photographers — Roman Fox, who shot the car-headlight image — told the press his shot was taken with a Fujifilm X-H2S in 2023, not a Nothing handset.

  • Top-down view of a spiral staircase with ornate mosaic tile patterns on the steps and walls, captured by Henry Han on Stills.
    Spiral staircase with intricate patterns on the steps and walls. (Photo by Henry Han via Stills)
  • Close-up photo of a classic car’s rounded headlight with reflections on the orange hood, taken by Roman Fox on Stills.
    The rounded headlight of a car. (Photo by Roman Fox via Stills)
  • Artistic photo of a glass filled with sparkling liquid casting a warm shadow against a softly lit background, by Alina Nechaeva on Stills.
    A glass filled with sparkling liquid, casting a warm shadow on a light background. (Photo by Alina Nechaeva via Stills)
  • Photograph of a traditional carved stone building with a person leaning on the window railing, captured by GS & Co on Stills.
    A tall building with a person by the window. (Photo by GS & Co via Stills)
  • Black and white portrait of a woman wearing a patterned headscarf and white shirt, looking directly into the camera, by Abdullahi Santuraki on Stills.
    Woman wearing a scarf on her head and a white shirt looks into the camera. (Photo by Abdullahi Santuraki via Stills)

Tech outlets that spoke to photographers and examined metadata confirmed the images were licensed professional photos rather than user shots taken with the Phone 3. The coverage spread quickly — The Verge, Android Authority, DPReview and several other outlets ran the findings within hours of each other.

Nothing’s explanation: placeholders, timing and an “unfortunate oversight”

Nothing’s co-founder, Akis Evangelidis, responded publicly on X, calling the images “placeholders” that should have been replaced before demo units shipped to stores. He explained that an initial version of a live demo unit (LDU) must be submitted with placeholders several months before launch for testing and qualification, and those placeholders are supposed to be swapped for final Phone 3 shots later in the production process. In this case, Evangelidis said, some demo units left the factory with the placeholders still in place; Nothing called it an “unfortunate oversight” and said it is “actively rectifying” the situation.

That defence — placeholders left in by mistake — is plausible as a process description, but it doesn’t fully answer why a company would license and use professional photos as placeholders rather than something clearly labeled “placeholder.” Critics say the final effect is the same: consumers were shown images presented as community photos captured with the Phone 3, when they were not.

Why people are annoyed (and why it matters)

Smartphone camera marketing has a long and sometimes messy history. Companies have been burned before for overstating their devices’ photographic prowess, doctoring photos, or using samples captured on other hardware — from embellished moon photos to “enhanced” demo shots. When a brand positions itself as a design-and-community-first company (as Nothing often does), its credibility depends on authenticity; presenting stock pro work as community samples undercuts that claim.

There are other practical reasons this matters. Buying a phone is often a camera decision: people weigh sensor size, software processing, and real-world picture quality. If demo content misrepresents what a handset can do, customers make decisions on false premises. At the very least, this is an embarrassment; at worst, it invites regulatory scrutiny about misleading advertising, and it erodes trust among early buyers and the enthusiast community who tend to amplify such missteps.

Does this mean the Phone 3’s camera is bad?

Not necessarily. Several outlets that covered the controversy noted that independent Phone 3 shots and early reviews show the device can still produce compelling images. The core complaint isn’t technical performance but transparency: the demo material claimed community-captured Phone 3 photos, when that claim was demonstrably false. Even a good camera doesn’t excuse a misleading presentation.

What this tells us about processes and accountability

From a product-operations point of view, the incident highlights the fragile handoff between early engineering/demo builds and mass-production marketing assets. Companies often use placeholders months before product finalisation; the placeholder → final-asset swap is a routine step. Nothing’s statement points to a breakdown in that pipeline, rather than the company says deliberate fakery. But the choice to license pro photos for placeholders — rather than using clearly marked filler images — is a puzzling misstep that made the mistake much easier to weaponise against the brand.

The likely fallout (and what to watch)

For Nothing, the immediate fix is straightforward: replace demo images in stores, issue corrected assets, and document a better checklist for LDU content before shipping. The longer challenge is reputational. Nothing has built a fanbase in part on transparency, cheeky design, and community involvement; it now needs to show it actually means that. How the company communicates next — whether it publishes a clear post-mortem of the process failure and what controls it will adopt — will matter more than the apology tweet.

Regulators in some markets take misleading advertising seriously; whether this episode crosses that threshold will depend on local rules and whether any compensation claims arise from buyers who say they were misled by in-store demos. For now, most of the conversation will play out online and in specialist tech coverage — but trust is fragile, and the cost of losing it is very real for a young hardware brand.

Bottom line

The Nothing Phone 3 camera scandal is less a story about image quality and more about optics in the wider sense: a small, avoidable internal process failure turned into a perception problem that feeds a larger narrative about authenticity. If Nothing wants to keep its community’s goodwill, it will need to show more than a quick apology — it will need transparent fixes and firmer controls so the next demo in a store actually reflects what a Phone 3 can do.


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