Roger Hicks
Veteran
...and getting anti-criminal and anti-terrorist security on the cheap. This seems to me to fit very well with the underlying questions of 'what is photography for?' and 'how can we benefit from it?'
First, a legal right to photograph and publish anything in a public place that is not a Restricted Place within the meaning of the Official Secrets Act. No ifs, buts or maybes.
Second, a government-funded national street photography contest with significant monthly prizes and a big annual prize.
Someone is taking pictures you consider suspicious? Photograph him/her doing it. If they are a terrorist, or a paedophile, or a common thief casing the joint, this will greatly increase their chance of being caught. If they're not: well, you both have a legal right to photograph anything, including each other.
The cost would be trivial -- the prizes, and expenses for the judges.
I first proposed this in my column in Amateur Photographer magazine in the UK in (as far as I recall) October 2005, with the idea that Britain could become a Mecca for street photographers, as well as gaining the security advantages. As no-one in the UK seems keen on it I offer it to the rest of the world...
Cheers,
Roger
First, a legal right to photograph and publish anything in a public place that is not a Restricted Place within the meaning of the Official Secrets Act. No ifs, buts or maybes.
Second, a government-funded national street photography contest with significant monthly prizes and a big annual prize.
Someone is taking pictures you consider suspicious? Photograph him/her doing it. If they are a terrorist, or a paedophile, or a common thief casing the joint, this will greatly increase their chance of being caught. If they're not: well, you both have a legal right to photograph anything, including each other.
The cost would be trivial -- the prizes, and expenses for the judges.
I first proposed this in my column in Amateur Photographer magazine in the UK in (as far as I recall) October 2005, with the idea that Britain could become a Mecca for street photographers, as well as gaining the security advantages. As no-one in the UK seems keen on it I offer it to the rest of the world...
Cheers,
Roger
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