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Dad Photographer
My question is innocent, so don't look too deep into it .
On the other hand,what if ... ?
On the other hand,what if ... ?
Very true, and the subject of an excellent essay by Wendell Berry. "Sex, Economy, Freedom, and Community".
And the notion that people have no privacy in public is self-evidently asinine. It's not the same AMOUNT of privacy that you have a right to in your home, but privacy is not binary. If you had no privacy in public, it would be legal for me to walk up to you on the train, open your briefcase, read your papers, and return them to you (and a more important test than legality is that our society would not think it rude).
The fact that we retain the right to be secure in our persons and papers outside of our own home makes it quite clear that there is "privacy" in public, the question up for reasonable debate is "how far does it extend?". Those who want the answer to be otherwise should consider it more carefully (speaking charitably).
I did. The iPod and CNN have a similar interface for that screen. This means that we're not too far away from seeing a positive ad campaign for Soylent Green cookies. 😱
-- self-censored, because yet another rehash of people's uninformed opinions about the law and the history of our civil society is pointless.
"uninformed?"
Sorry, buddy, but the right "to be secure in persons and papers" you refer to (a quote from the 4A) does NOT have anything to do with you or me photographing anyone on the street.
It has to do with a citizen and the government, no matter what you may think.
There are/may be laws which are applicable to privacy, depending on where you are in the States. These laws may or may not be directed specifically towards photography.
For example, it's illegal to tap someone's phone because there's a federal law saying you can't, and the nature of a telephone network provides a nexus for federal jurisdiction.
Not in a vacuum at all. In line with common law. Which was directed against the sovereign's potential for abuse of power by violating home and hearth, not at all concerned with what one private person does to another.
Either way, as long as the discussion is clear on that. I am constantly irritated when people talk about, for example, an employer infringing on their "right to free speech." Such a right doesn't exist in that context. Sorry if it got my back up.