Malaysian man claims he "found a selfie and video of a monkey , After his phone was stolen, he saw a monkey selfie"
Zackrydz Rodge, a 20-year-old student, said he woke up when he was asleep and found his phone missing.
According to the BBC, the incident was mysterious because there were no signs of loss or robbery. How the phone got lost and how photos and videos were uploaded to his phone has not been verified yet.
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The next day Rodge's father sees a monkey sitting outside the house. After calling the phone again, they heard the phone ring near a rubbish bin under a nearby tree. While checking the phone, Rodgers found a series of pictures of a monkey, photographed with perfect handicrafts!
The footage obtained by the BBC showed that a monkey also tried to eat a phone and had a timestamp when the phone was lost. There is also a series of monkey taking selfies, not just monkeys but nature, plants and photos of trees etc.
Something yang korang takkan jumpa setiap abad. Semalam pagi tido bangun bangun tengahari phone hilang. Cari cari satu rumah geledah sana sini semua takde then last last jumpa casing phone je tinggal bawah katil tapi phonenya takde. Sambung bawah. pic.twitter.com/0x54giujnY
— z (@Zackrydz) September 13, 2020
Rodji shared the Twitter thread. If you take a closer look, you will find selfies of monkeys in various forms of inverted monkey poses:
This is not the first time that monkeys have been shown to be attracted to selfies.
In 2011, this photo was taken by six-year-old Naruto macaque monkey, who lives freely in the Tangkoko Reserve on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. Several others were photographed about four years ago using a camera held by British photographer David Slater.
Ironically, what started out as iconic soon became serious for Slater. When several animal rights groups said that the monkey could benefit from the price of the viral image after clicking on it.
Naruto should be recognized as the owner of the image and should be compensated for copyright infringement. After it was later used in a wildlife book, animal rights activists argued in a 2015 “monkey selfie lawsuit,” a federal lawsuit. "Naruto has the right to own the copyright ... to receive the royalties in the same manner and in the same amount as any other author," the lawsuit states.
However, three years later, the court ruled in his favor in the Monkey Selfie case. There is a lack of lawsuits to protect the monkey's copyright and an animal rights group cannot act as a legal guardian on such matters, the U.S. Court of Appeals has ruled on the maintenance of the monkey.
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