People are really looking at this the wrong way. The "ban" is geared at independent film makers in production sneaking around without permits and gives police officers some authority to deal with them. The whole thing is kinda silly as Ive worked on $15 million dollar jobs where we've snuck shots unpermitted. Anyhow, the legislation is the mayors office attempt to get more people to go through the permit process, which ultimately is good for the city, if you lived here you might understand that a little better. Where it gets grey is with still photography and even then, making commercial fashion shoots go through the same permit process we have to in film production is fair ground. I think by and large guy with camera on the street isn't going to be bothered, the legislation just allows for it under certain circumstances. You have to remember that jay walking is fully illegal here in NYC and if police wanted to they could write you a ticket for crossing improperly, but its pretty much every new yorkers given right to jaywalk so... The Mayors office tried to crack down on jaywalking a few years ago and that effort lasted about either seconds...
All this aside, whats happening now is very very very real. I was stopped and questioned by a cop I guess about two weeks ago for standing on a corner in front of city hall HOLDING a camera. When I asked the cop to cite the law he was enforcing by interviewing me, he explained that this photo thing was going through so they were just starting to enforce it, this poor guy was completely unprepared to deal with a citizen that knew anything about it and the whole thing was kinda laughable.
At any rate, its definitely a good thing to protest this thing on one level, the wording of the legislation is too broad, but the general idea of it is hardly a bad thing if you work in the industry here in town. It really is focused on commerical jobs, yet its joe nobody who is making the most noise about it.