Your flower and the ones you found on the Internet are definitely NOT pure species. Both have either lawrenceanum, or callosum, or both (= Maudiae), in them. This type of breeding (with incorrect labels), is typical of the HUGE number of plants that have come out of Holland as pot plants. The Dutch produce some awesome healthy plants; but they typically pass off hybrids as pure species. They "improve" upon the species by making crosses and then back crossing to one of the species, thus often producing plants with larger flowers, or enhanced shape (as the dorsal is in your flower). Your flower looks like superbiens from the pouch-down. However, it has an enhanced (larger, more flaring and wide), dorsal sepal, which comes from the introduction of callosum and/or lawrenceanum genes.
Another example is Paph. primulinum. The really big, bold and very beautiful, yellow primulinums that have come out of Holland as pot plants, labelled as pure primulinum, are actually hybrids involving true primulinum and the album form of other Cochlopetalums such as glaucophyllum. The result is a larger, more robust plant, one that has hybrid vigour and is easier to grow and bloom, with lager, more impressive flowers. These are all better qualities for a commercial grower to invest his time and money in producing. The flowers are really lovely to look at; but, I wish the producers would tell the truth about their lineage and not hide the fact that they are in fact, hybrids.
p.s. Eddie, would you please update your profile so that we can tell which country you are in? Thanks.