spiderfrank
just a dreamer
Bessa R, Superia X-tra 400 iso, CV 35mm f2.5
( face "erased" for privacy )
Ciao
Franco
RML said:I think this may be due to Italian laws.
loslosbaby said:I'll go ahead and speak up--I have currently 6 photos being used without my permission on the web.
This is a hilarious and sad example how the supposed copyright laws don't work:
http://www.panic.com/extras/ripoff/
G.
iandg said:Franco is lucky in a way, here in the uk if you took a picture of a child without the parents consent its likely you would be met by the angry parents or arrested or both.It is becoming quite a sick world we are living in.
emraphoto said:all of this (people in the street bit) is a big concern for me now. my heart and mind is completely comitted to shooting people in their environment, "street" photography if you will... i just moved to a region of the world where judgement was passed a few years ago AGAINST the photographer. he had taken a photo of a girl and then DONATED it to a small literary group for a book cover. thousands of dollars were awarded to the girl.
the ironic thing is if you go to the local museum... all the images you see of the city many years into the past are full of people. the only visual glimpse of the times past. i can't imagine someone in the future explaining the huge hole in our visual history... well you see, there was this "war on terrorism" thing...
bugger!
i'm seriously considering selling all my gear for some medium/large format stuff and shooting landscapes.
emraphoto said:i'm seriously considering selling all my gear for some medium/large format stuff and shooting landscapes.
You have my sympathy - that's a real bummer. And it's so frustrating too - it looks like you probably have a great photo there, but without being able to see the child's face it's not really possible to tell.Here in Italy there is a stupid and not so clear law about privacy: you can shot a man in the street if the subject is the street, but you need his permission if he is the subject of the photo. To be more precise... You can take all the photos you want, but you need his permission if you want to public them (a book, or internet). But... You can shot him if he is a "public man", or if you are documenting a manifestation or en "event", and if you and your subject are in a public place.
So, to be sure... I erased the face!