VIDEO – Can security guards delete your photos? - UPDATE |
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| Business and Law | ||||
| By Humphrey Cheung | ||||
| Thursday, April 03, 2008 07:50 | ||||
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San Diego (CA) – Pictures capture a moment, important moments like the toothless smiles of our children, the agony of a Superbowl defeat or a political protestor’s last moments of freedom. Photos can crumble governments and free the oppressed, but everyday pictures are usually fairly mundane – that is until an overzealous security guard walks up and demands that they be erased. Update #2 April 3rd 2008 - Mr. Holmes has sent us a gracious email and all parties consider everything resolved with no hard feelings at all. Update April 3rd 2008 - It appears an executive from the Travel Goods Show (Mr. Rob Holmes)has responded in the comments section below. While we appreciate his response, he gets several facts wrong - facts that could have found out with a simple Google search or talking with his staff. Mr. Holmes says , "Unfortunately, Mr.Cheung omitted certain facts from his otherwise entertaining article and video. 1. We did have permission to film from the staff. We were led into the show to the press room (in the back of the venue), where we were given a permission slip to sign and we had to carry that around with us during the show. So we did that. Several people saw us sign the slip … I’m sure you could ask them. 2. “he clearly did not intend to report on new travel goods products” – We did two articles (with video) about new travel products. A simple Google search would have showed you these two stories We understand that Google can be an intimidating resource and sometimes very difficult to use, so we’ve found this good cheatsheet on how to use the various search terms. Click here. Video footage of a security guard demanding the erasure of photos At last week’s Travel Goods Show in San Diego, we recroded one security guard telling an attendee to erase several pictures in her camera - oh the joys of having a camcorder with 16X zoom and a shotgun mic. The above video shows the encounter where the attendee quietly goes through each picture and deletes them. But did she have to comply with guard? Back in 2005 and 2006, Andrew Kantor with the USA Today tackled those issues in two columns where he said the public is often quite confused about their rights. “What I discovered is that a lot of people have ideas — often very clear ones — of what is legal and what isn't,” said Kantor. You can read his initial column here and the follow-up column here. To the guard’s credit, there was a large sign posted near the entrance of the event which stated, “Show management reserves the right to confiscate camera equipment, disks and film.” Most people would take it for granted that such a sign gives those guards the right to perform those actions, but that simply isn’t true, according to noted photography rights attorney Bert Krages II.
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