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For those of you that are claiming "No Green Spot" make sure your photo of a white piece of paper is taken under florescent lighting. I thought mine did not have the problem also because I had a lot of natural daylight sun coming into the room. As soon as I went into a room that only has florescent light, it showed big time.
 
For those of you that are claiming "No Green Spot" make sure your photo of a white piece of paper is taken under florescent lighting. I thought mine did not have the problem also because I had a lot of natural daylight sun coming into the room. As soon as I went into a room that only has florescent light, it showed big time.


I'm willing to bet EVERY iPhone 4 has the green blob issue. I, too, just took a picture of a blank piece of white paper at work under CFL lighting and I could clearly see what everyone is talking about.
 
I'm willing to bet EVERY iPhone 4 has the green blob issue. I, too, just took a picture of a blank piece of white paper at work under CFL lighting and I could clearly see what everyone is talking about.

Just tried it with a low-end digital camera, and it's fine, no green blob. OK, comparing apples and oranges maybe... but suggests that this is a problem with the iPhone's camera/software rather than a problem inherent to all digital cameras under CFL.
 
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