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Photography and Filmmaking

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Philip-Lorca diCorcia & Erno Nussenzweig

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Chris Summerfield
Chris Summerfield
United Kingdom
In reply to eucinpyos:

Its interesting,there is so much being written here that all makes sence from various angles. As a photographer I spend a lot of time watching and listening to people and observing with out a camera, as well as with.
I never try to take candid pictures and always try to ask, how ever on a few occasions I have seen teenagers taking close up candid pictures of girls or women on the water front near where I live, on one occassion L heard the lad say to his friend after taking an ariel shot of a woman in her forties topless, I want to show me mates her saggy tits. he was shooting on his mobile phone.
Another time this year a younger guy was photographing french girls in bakinis and going in close up of the croch of one of them, again with a mobile phone cam
I told him I think that you had better ask first mate, he then shouted to me you grass I would not get the picture if I do that.
The point I think that I am getting at its very hard with the new digital technology to control candid picture taking, and every day we are being filmed in anycase if we walk through City centres.
I would not like people photographing me without first asking.
I would then jump up and Vogue do sumersaults if thats what they wanted, but it rude not to ask.

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shaw
shaw
United Kingdom
In reply to Chris Summerfield:

i know someone who woke up in a police cell and was being charged for murder.he was drunk in a gutter,..a man was dead opposite him and he was covered in his blood...an open and shut case?no- cctv footage showed he hadnt murdered him just drunkly picked himup to see what was wrong before collapsing himself.
so cctv -its not always a bad thing.

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well, how about all the paparazzi that's been sneaking taking pictures of the celebs? are they getting sued when they sell the pics to mags? and then i come to a conclussion that when you askes someone to posed, they become a model that have rights to be paid. but if it's just a captured moment, it's just a matter of ethical. maybe we have to ask for the subject's permission, but how if it's in a difficult situation, like take photos when you're travelling to be featured on travel magazine? do we have to write the names and contact numbers of all the people captured in the pics? hmmm....

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bump

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monumental case, monumental publicity.

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Showing messages 21–25 of 25


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