Rolleiflexible
Member
In related issues, if you happened upon an accident, would you shoot pictures or help the victims, both, neither? What about some guy getting beat up? A robbery? A cop beating a civilian?
I'd like to know what people here think about the issues I raised?
Alan, FWIW, I think this conversation has hopelessly jumbled together a number of unrelated questions. The OP was expressing qualms about making a photograph -- presumably, for his art -- of a homeless person in Paris without permission. (A qualm I share.)
Somehow, this question has turned variously into commercial questions, copyright issues, privacy issues, expropriation of likenesses (a US trademark issue), the need for releases, documentary photography, photojournalism, crime scene reporting, the legality of street photography, and the viability of the constitutional monarchy in England.
To answer your question: I think it is fitting to take photographs of crimes or accidents as evidence to help the victim gain redress. But I fail to see how that addresses the moral concern raised by the OP, which seems often to have been forgotten after 150 posts.
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