There are two distinctly wrong counter-arguments being presented, and they form the bulk of all responses.
First: I am
not in the least bit interested in what a PERSON calls them self. Photographer, digitizer, artist, print maker, fiddler, or clown. None of that was in my argument, and no personage of any kind was being short-changed or demeaned or lessened by the idea I am advancing. I am not in ANY WAY posing personal judgments of any kind. Way too many posts skipped right to the "how dare you say I'm not a REAL photographer." If that was you, you totally and utterly missed the point.
Second: I am
not in any way trying to apply
qualitative judgment about images made on film vs. images made with computers. Sorry, that also grossly misses my point. I am not arguing about outcomes of the image making.
What I am arguing involves this line of reasoning.
1. The processes of making images from computers and film are different in very fundamentally important ways.
2. In 1970 (let's say), KODAK did not routinely keep copies in their vaults of every image they processed for the millions of people making images. And because they didn't, they were unable to use your photographs for data mining, surveillance, crime detection, profiling their customers in order to sell sensitive data to those with money and ulterior motives. Your photographs - with the possible exception of illegal pornography - were your business alone.
3. The very essence of freedom and the idea of a democratic society does NOT EVER include mass surveillance and spying on the entire population.
4. In 2018 people can still buy
film, shoot pictures, develop the film in their home, print the results with complete anonymity. It is as any art form ought to be - - private until you make it public...if you choose. That description is my meaning of PROCESS. You are in control of that process, and you decide what you will or won't sharew with others, if you choose to share at all. You are experiencing "artistic freedom." And that is a crucial social value.
5. In 2018 people are using cell phones, tablets, computerized cameras and other softwares to either initiate, or complete an image..or both. Billions of these images are being stored in "clouds" that the image maker doesn't own, doesn't control, and can't see into as a process. Additionally, many millions more are using "cloud based" subscription tools sold by the like of Adobe, where once more, your entire artistic effort is being held or copied into data farms you don't control. This is not so much the exception now, as it is the rule.
6. The owners of these "clouds" are nefarious, as has already been proven over and over. Whether it is Facebook selling all your data (includes photos), or Google giving back doors to the NSA, or Apple pretending to offer a locked phone, Or Google inventing AI to derive value and meaning from your photos, the point is that at an ever increasing pace, your image making is being used for data mining, surveillance, prosecution of crimes real or invented, and all sorts of other NON-DEMOCRATIC tyrannical purposes which you did not agree to, and based on the posts here, didn't even know was happening.
7. Given point 1 through 7, it is not arguable that the two image making processes are
radically different at the foundation. They are only interchangeable vis a vis the outcome - a picture. But through one process you are a free artist in a free society, and in the other process you are acceding your privacy, and ultimately your freedom, once AI can translate your photos into data useful to others who can either demand it by fiat or pay for it.
8. Enter
@Maris. Thank goodness. The gist of his rather excellent post is this in a pithy summary: Different things need different words. Under the current order "photography" is so widely interpreted as to cover many wickedly different processes. This means the use of the word is losing power, losing clarity, and therefore losing meaning in people's minds. You can't talk intelligently about things for which there are no words. If every "flat thing" in your house was called a "table" .....well, I hope some get the idea. When I quoted Ken Rockwell, I have no idea what HE might have been trying to imply and I don't care. I said, "it made me think," by examining my own understanding of the processes, the words, the meaning, the outcomes, and the future. My own argument about "Photography IS film" may not even make sense to Ken Rockwell for all I know. It was just a "tip" he provided to cause me to think about it carefully.
9. I believe the artists and image makers should become very familiar with the loss of privacy, surveillance, and data mining associated with what they cavalierly call "photography." I understand the most people could care less about freedom, democracy, surveillance false prosecutions because in their words, "they've done nothing wrong and have nothing to worry about." But, for the rest of us, who see a nasty future ahead of 24/7 surveillance and tyranny, we might want to try to extract one of the last remaining private acts -
taking pictures on film and developing them ourselves - from the clusterf*ck being created by Google and Apple and Facebook and the NSA as they "attempt to help us take better pictures."
For that reason, I suggest that "photography" be a clearly defined art form, as it originated, and remained until the Internet and computer cameras, stole our privacy with digital/cloud/AI/surveillance technologies. In this way, with it's own legitimized name, discussions on how to protect it will not get submarined, diverted and perverted by those involved in a wholly different process.