Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/07/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Tina.. You dodged the question.... You have been specifically told not to take pictures for professional purposes.... what do you do? You have the right to argue. I will defend that right, politely used and to the correct authorities. The question is: Do you take the pictures after being told not to? ( Note that it makes no difference WHY you are being told not to not take the pictures.... you have been officially informed not to.) If the facility says no pictures, you do not have the right nor the license to take nor to use those pictures, no matter the purpose. In fact, you have been specifically told that you do not have the right. . Is this an incorrect statement? BTW, Ted was inside the Historical Site doing stock not newspaper photography..... not exactly public property, and he was overseas ( Italy) where the rules and legal rights of the individual may and probably are different than the US or Canada..... Not the issue... you are told specifically not to take the pictures. You have no license to do so.... You do not own the right to sell those pictures..... The comment on the thief is to bring to light that no matter what your job is, it does not change the rules of ethics. It has nothing do with theft. I have no problem with no signs and no rules in force and you do as you want. But it is your obligation as a professional supplier that you have the legal right to transfer the rights of the picture to the user ( advertising agency for example). Ignorance of the rules of the house, is no excuse. You can not transfer what you do not own. I think you pointed out that you do not ask permission... so, in those cases, you have nothing in writing? Back to the question... :::: You have been specifically and officially told to refrain from taking pictures for professional purposes.... ......Your ethical response is to do what? Frank Filippone red735i@earthlink.net