See a red "X" (or other placeholder) on a Web page rather than an image? This behavior can occur for several reasons: link corruption, compatibility issues between sites and Internet Explorer, or other issues (may be fixed by changing the settings of Internet Explorer).
You can see most of the pictures, but you can't see all the pictures
If you have this problem with only individual pictures or pages, you should be able to view some of the pictures on that site or other site. You can try the following measures:
Open the page on the desktop and right-click (or long Press) to display the blank space of the picture. Then, click or click Show Picture in the Drop-down menu. If this does not work, the link to the picture may be corrupted and the site owner must fix the problem.
Open the page on the desktop and try to enable the compatibility view to confirm that there are compatibility issues that prevent the image from displaying correctly.
It is recommended that you turn off trace protection and ActiveX filtering for this site. Trace protection and ActiveX filtering help protect your privacy by blocking images or other content that might cause your security information or privacy to be at risk.
Unable to view pictures on any web site
If it is not possible to view any pictures on any site, make sure that Internet Explorer is set to display pictures, and then try to delete the Internet temporary files, or reset the settings for Internet Explorer. The operation method is as follows:
Set Internet Explorer to display pictures
1. Open the desktop, and then click or click the Internet Explorer icon in the taskbar.
2. Click or click the "Tools" button, and then click or click Internet Options.
3. On the Advanced tab, under Multimedia, click or click the Show pictures check box, and then click or click OK.
If this does not work, try clearing the temporary Internet files.
Clear Internet Temporary files
1. Open the desktop, and then click or click the Internet Explorer icon in the taskbar.
2. Click or click the "Tools" button, and then click or click Internet Options.
3. On the General tab, under Browse History, click or click Delete.
4. In the Delete Browsing History dialog box, clear the temporary Internet files and Web site files check box.
5. Click or click "Delete" and click "OK".
If this does not work, try resetting your security settings.
Resetting security settings for Internet Explorer
1. Open the desktop, and then click or click the Internet Explorer icon in the taskbar.
2. Click or click the "Tools" button, and then click or click Internet Options.
3. On the Security tab, click or click Default Level, and then click or click OK.
If none of the above recommended methods work, you can try resetting Internet Explorer to its default settings.