It's a broken image, as you specify no src Point the src somewhere and the border goes away Browser rendering of broken images vary greatly cross-browser and depending on whether you include an alt attribute (which you always should). A 1px inner-border is commonly drawn in broken images in more than just Webkit. You should not deliberately include a broken or srcless image in your document.
If you don't want a src it shouldn't be an img.
It's a broken image, as you specify no src. Point the src somewhere and the border goes away. Browser rendering of broken images vary greatly cross-browser and depending on whether you include an alt attribute (which you always should).
A 1px inner-border is commonly drawn in broken images in more than just Webkit. You should not deliberately include a broken or srcless image in your document. If you don't want a src, it shouldn't be an .
Possible duplicate. Take a look at this : stackoverflow.com/questions/1073015/how-... Use a "div" instead of a "img".
Point the src somewhere and the border goes away. Browser rendering of broken images vary greatly cross-browser and depending on whether you include an alt attribute (which you always should). A 1px inner-border is commonly drawn in broken images in more than just Webkit.
You should not deliberately include a broken or srcless image in your document. If you don't want a src, it shouldn't be an .
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