It depends on intent. I guess I was speaking more to the genre of street photography, not with regard to cellphone news photography. Most street photography is not chasing the news of the moment. The average joe (who is not news worthy) is not used to being photographed the way a street photographer photographs them.
I agree. However, you said street photography is perfectly normal when a lot of the general public does not feel the same way. It doesn't need to be normal though.
If I may jump in to this conversation for a moment, I would like to say that I think sepiareverb is on the right track in regard to street photography, particularly with his statement -
By eliminating all but mainstream activity we are doomed to a world where the lowest common denominator becomes the only acceptable course.
I don't think it is a good policy to let our culture devolve into a situation where lawmakers get into the business of outlawing things that are not considered
"normal" by the general public.
Psychiatrists and counseling psychologists who hold Ph.D. degrees cannot agree on a cogent and objective definition of what is "normal" in the psychological sense; what hope is there that the general public or lawmakers could arrive at a cogent and objective definition of what is "normal" - let alone a definition that is fair and equitable to all parties concerned?
Slim to none would be my expectation.
A few of the activities that are not "normal" according to the general public (whoever they are) includes:
Living the Amish lifestyle
Extreme skiing
Going to church
Training for and competing in the Ironman triathlon
Going to a Tony Robbins retreat and walking on red hot coals
Being a vegetarian
Hunting deer or geese (or anything else)
Making photographs with film cameras
Making photographs with large format view cameras
Rock climbing
Collecting and caring for poisonous snakes
Collecting scorpions
Walking the Appalachian trail or the Pacific Crest trail end to end
Making photographs of people on the street, sidewalk or other public areas
Developing photographic film at home
The general public (whoever they are) does not engage in any of the above activities to the best of my knowledge. If asked, most members of the general public would likely say that any of the above are not "normal" (since they do not engage in them and they consider themselves to be "normal").
Should all the above "not normal" activities therefore be outlawed because they are not "normal" and "normal" people do not engage in such pursuits?
I hope the answer is and always will be a resounding
NO.
We are supposed to celebrate diversity. I would think that doing so would include permitting others to engage in activities that are not looked at as "normal" by the general public as long as those activities do no harm to others.
To the best of my knowledge, no one has ever been deemed by a court of law (at least in the U.S.) to have been harmed by the act of another person photographing them on the street.