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Request to remove images.
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SeaviewParticipant
I think I know the answer to my own question :D but I said I’d check just to be sure. I covered an event over the weekend with the event organizers permission, it was held on open roads and I was photographing from the side pavement. I put the photos up on Facebook and thought very little else about them until I started receiving messages (eight messages from one lady) from a number of ladies who didn’t like their photos as they were looking a bit tired. This is a first for me and I’m wondering from a legal point of view do I have to remove the images.
Thanks.
Dave.
PS. I’ve now removed the images.
paulParticipantFrom a legal point of view, you are well within your rights to take and post the photos.
They have no right to privacy in a public road/space like that.
So, totally up to you if you want to keep or remove them.
SeaviewParticipantThanks for your quick response Paul, just as I thought myself. If I didn’t have permission from the organizers would it make any difference.
Thanks again.
Dave.
markst33ParticipantSeaviewParticipantOne of the images was fine, must be incredibly vain :D As for the other image you’d need some size of an air brush. :wink: :wink:
Dave.
MarkKeymasterPersonally I’d leave them. Couldn’t be putting up with that nonsense :) Vanity…
miki gParticipantPersonally, I’d just remove the images after telling the women that I agree that they don’t look good. :D
Although you are legally entitled to take their photo, I came across this interesting article which could put a different twist on things.
http://www.thejournal.ie/readme/women-who-eat-on-tubes-stranger-shaming-social-media-1403346-Apr2014/” onclick=”window.open(this.href);return false;BrickerParticipantHi
I took a look and considering the event(s) involved everyone looked tired!
Maybe the tired thing is a smoke screen and she had thrown a sickie from work????paulParticipantSeaview wrote:
If I didn’t have permission from the organizers would it make any difference.
No, I can’t see how it would make any difference at all. You’re in a public space taking photos of a people in a public space doing a public activity.
As for Data Protection issues/requests, that’s a separate matter. You can have very long winded discussions over it, including some I have had with the DPC. In the end, there have been no case law precedents, that I am aware of, where the DPC have forced removal of photos taken in public for breach of DPA following a subject complaint.
SeaviewParticipantThanks for the info lads, some interesting reading there, bit of a mine field me thinks. :D I think for most of what I capture I’d be covered under the photo-journalism clause as they’re mostly organized events.
Having read all that, I’m kind of happy I’ve stayed away from street photography :D , now that could be a bit dodgy.
Dave.
miki gParticipantI wouldn’t be too worried about the data protection or privacy issues in cases like this. If you were using the images to ridicule your subjects then it could be a different matter.
AnonymousParticipantSeaview wrote:
Having read all that, I’m kind of happy I’ve stayed away from street photography :D , now that could be a bit dodgy.
Dave.
You haven’t lived Dave!
Street Photography is what it’s all about.
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