Category Archives: Press Freedom

Flickr for democracy

Times have changed, with the advent of flickr those revolting french students have become photo journalists and have started posting there own photos to gain support for the international community.

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Its not just the French though. In Belarus the political opposition has been using flickr to spread thier message about rigged elections.

Who would have thought such freedom of speech from a yahoo company :)

Busted for taking pictures on Calgary Transit

Just another warning to be careful where you take your pictures. The guy is not sure if it was racially motivated but I guess that is debatable. I do know both Damian and I took photographs of Calgarys LRT (the “CTrain”) while we were there and were lucky enough to not catch any hassle for doing so.

Infringing Upon Freedom at After Hours with Sami Khan

So Calgarians, especially brown Calgarians, be warned, if you take pictures in the transit system you may be taken to the side by some policemen and questioned

With the paranoid times we live in I guess this will happen more and more, either legitimately for security reasons or as an excuse to hassle innocent citizens in cases where the individual likes to abuse their authority. I don’t think there is any way to prove which this case was one way or the other.

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Photography, the Law and Privacy, Again

Yet again the law governing photography in the USA has been tested, this time landing in favour of the photographer. This was particularly interesting as it was not just a privacy issue but one of religious rights also.

A New York court ruled this week that a photographer who took pictures of subjects on the street without their knowledge and then made hundreds of thousands of dollars selling those images did not have to get the permission of his subjects because the intention of the work was art, not commerce. The ruling reaffirms that people in public spaces cannot assume any privacy privilege, even if, as in this case, the subject was an orthodox jew, who regard portraits as graven images and disgraces the man in his community.

Source: blog.photoblogs.org

As a photographer I enjoy taking pictures of people, scenes seem more alive with people in them, but I do not see it as a “right”. I wasn’t aware of this particular religious belief but I feel like I would prefer to be sensitive to it rather than inflame the issue by selling the photograph (marketability of my photography aside!).

Should we be able to take and sell photographs of people just because it is in the name of art? Does this cross over into rulings around photographing children?

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Photography and Police

As photographers will do, we like to snap everything interesting we see. This is not always approved of, especially when snapping private property. It seems like some photographers do not take kindly to being told where and how they can follow their hobby.

Brian Larter » Blog Archive » Snappers to defy police ban

“The police have got no place making such warnings,” president Brian Walters SC said. “Merely to threaten is exceeding police powers and is an abuse of power.

While I am all for photographer freedom I think advising photographers to go against an explicit police warning is irresponsible.

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