Earlier this month, DJI announced the best 2017 drone photos of their SkyPixel contest. The winner got valuable prizes, but then it turned out that the photo wasn’t even shot from a drone. As a matter of fact, it wasn’t even shot in 2017, but three years earlier.

The rules of the contest require photographers to submit photos taken using “any aerial platform” and taken in 2017. However, PetaPixel reports that the winning image in the Landscape category doesn’t meet either of the requirements.

The image in question is named Sun’s Up, Nets Out and it was taken by photographer Zay Yar Lin with a Nikon D750. He told Amateur Photographer that he took the photo “from a high bamboo stage built near the fishing place in the lake for photography purposes.” It’s probably not what DJI meant by “aerial platform.” Anyhow, this interview dates back to 2016, which brings us to the next issue: the photo wasn’t taken in 2017. As reported further, the same photo was submitted to several other contests in the previous years. These include NatGeo 2015 Traveler Photo Contest, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards, and Amateur Photographer of the Year 2016. The EXIF data on the NatGeo page doesn’t only show that the photo was taken with a Nikon D750, but also that it was captured in 2014. The winner of SkyPixel contest was awarded Nikon D850 and DJI Phantom 4 Pro Obsidian drone. However, the photo was disqualified from the contest, as DPReview reports. Still, Zay Yar Lin explains that his DSLR was, in fact, attached to a hexacopter when he captured the winning image on the bamboo stage. This is the statement he gave PetaPixel regarding this case: DPReview points out that the photographer didn’t mention the hexacopter when he gave the interview about this image to Amateur Photographer in 2016. But if he did attach the DSLR to the hexacopter, I guess he found a loophole in the contest rules. Still, the fact that the photo was shot in 2014 is something he couldn’t fake so easily, considering that it was submitted to several contests before 2017. Upon disqualifying the photo from the contest, some people argue that “it’s still a nice photo.” And I have to agree: regardless of the gear used, the photo is nice indeed. But still, if the contest has certain gear and year requirements and they are not fulfilled, I guess the photo, no matter how good it is, can’t be accepted. [via DPReview, PetaPixel; image credits: Zay Yar Lin]