NSW
Photo Rights
Australian
street photography legal issues
by
Andrew Nemeth BSc (Hons) LLB MTeach
Introduction
The
following by is an analysis of legal issues which apply to street photography
in NSW Australia.
Created
in response to objections to my Sydney Unposed project, it is
written from a photographer's perspective, with a focus on what rights shooters
have (and don't have) when it comes to candid photographs of people. Please
note: it is not an encyclopaedia on every possible aspect of photographic law,
so it does not attempt to address issues like anti-terrorist
legislation, council photography permits or National Park commercial photo
restrictions. Instead the sole purpose of the following is to discuss legal
issues which apply to people photography only.
In
case you are wondering, I am a photographer and qualified solicitor (UNSW 1991) who
worked for a short while at a large Sydney law firm, before leaving the
profession in 1992 to find a more honest way to make a living. So the following
is based on an (ex) practitioner's understanding of Intellectual Property and
Privacy Law, and not just the usual Internet Hearsay. =)
BTW
when citing this article, please use http://photorights.4020.net.
2011
Updates:
27
Sep — Revised and updated Facebook privacy links
15
Apr — Updated privacy-tort Giller v Procopets link to 2008 VIC Appeal Court
decision
07
Mar — Added link to how Facebook profits from harvesting demographic
information
25
Jan — Fixed many broken links to third-party resources & websites
15
Jan — Revised and updated the 4020 Photo Rights PDF infosheet
Your
right to take photographs
In
Australia the taking and publication of a person's photograph, without their
consent or knowledge but within the limitations outlined below, is not
an invasion of privacy, nor is it in contravention of case or statute law.
Privacy
advocates may disapprove, but in this country people-photography has always
been, and for the moment remains, a perfectly legal thing to do.
1.
High Courts "approve"
In
Australia most forms of "unauthorised" photography have in fact been
authorised since the 1937 High Court decision in Victoria Park
Racing v. Taylor (1937) 58 CLR 479 (at p.496). This was reaffirmed recently
in ABC v
Lenah (2001) HCA 63, where the Court ruled that despite the passage of
decades since Victoria Park, any concept of a Tort of invasion of
privacy still does not exist in Australia.
As
Justice Dowd put it with ruthless clarity in R v
Sotheren (2001) NSWSC 204: A person, in our society, does not have a right
not to be photographed.
2.
Photography is not (yet) a Crime
Many
photographers are fed-up with being treated like perverts. In the last few
years things have deteriorated to such an extent that JPG Magazine devoted an entire issue to it
in February 2006:
[…]
amateur photographers are the documentarians of real life. People with cameras
bear witness to the everyday dramas of ordinary people. We capture our world to
help us understand it. We are not terrorists. We are not dangerous. And we are
certainly not a threat.
Likewise
the lengthy article by John Reid and subsequent
blog discussion, Talking Pictures: Photography Is Not A Crime, on the Sydney
Morning Herald website (Feb 2007). Ditto the 2010 Sydney Photo Rights Rally plus UK
websites I'm a Photographer,
not a Terrorist and Not-A-Crime.
Similar
sentiments have led to the making of a documentary movie called Off Limits (La rue zone
interdite) (2005). Featuring interviews with Marc Riboud, William Klein,
Willy Ronis, Janine Niepce and Elliott Erwitt, it was directed by Gilbert Duclos — the
Quebecian street photographer who lost a 1998 Supreme Court case concerning his
photo of an art student sitting on a bank's steps (see the Canadian discussion
below).
3.
No Federal Bill of Rights
A
legacy of our convict past is that Australia has never had a Bill of Rights. Constitutionally
speaking, there has never been a national concept of a Right To Privacy.
Because of this, our common law has always rejected attempts to prohibit
photography by merely claiming privacy rights — see this PLPR 1999
overview by Sharon Theedar, as well as this Net Law article by Jeremy Malcolm.
Interestingly,
Australia is a signatory to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCRR), which means the Federal Government
could in theory establish a statutory Bill of Rights by implementing the treaty
via the External
Affairs Power in the Constitution. That it has not been done is mainly due
to politics, history and
indifferent public opinion. Despite this, on the 60th anniversary of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights in December 2008, the Federal Government
announced the creation of a 4-member consultation panel to look into the
creation of a Bill of Rights charter for Australia. Maybe. One day.
Implied
Rights to Freedom of Speech
Analyse
the constitution as scrupulously as you like, but you won't find anything on
personal rights. Yet thanks to 1990's
judicial legerdemain, the High Court discovered that, well actually,
media proprietors
citizens do have a few implied Rights to Freedom of Speech — see this research note by Roy Jordan (2002).
media proprietors
citizens do have a few implied Rights to Freedom of Speech — see this research note by Roy Jordan (2002).
So
does this mean photographers can now use Freedom of Speech to counter
restrictions on photography? Unfortunately, no. In typical High Court fashion,
our "rights" have been carefully limited to only matters regarding
political discourse (eg. the Sydney
anti-pope protests in July 2008). To quote Roy Jordan:
[…]
there are implied rights to free speech and communication on matters concerning
politics and government, e.g. permitting political advertising during election
campaigns. This is known as the 'implied freedom of political communication'.
That's
it. Which means for general (ie. non political) photography, Freedom of Speech
does not exist in Australian federal law.
Victoria
Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities
This act was passed in
2006 and became fully operational in January 2008. For the first time in an
Australian State, it implemented most of the elements found in a typical Bill
of Rights, including Freedom of movement, expression, assembly and association,
Right to liberty and security and — most importantly for photographers —
Protection of privacy and reputation. It is still too early to see what impact
it will have on candid photography, but it is not unreasonable to expect
someone will eventually use it to wage anti-photo lawfare.
A
couple of important caveats: (1) the VCoHRaR is jurisdictionally limited to
Victoria and does not apply to the Commonwealth or any other state; (2) the
Australian Capital Territory has had its own Human Rights Act since 2004,
yet in all this time it has still not been used to ban photography.
Limitations
on photo rights
Just
because "unauthorised" photography has not been generally prohibited,
it does not mean it's a free-for-all. In NSW Anti-Voyeurism, Defamation
and Obscenity laws still apply, as do common law
doctrines of Nuisance, Trespass, or statutory prohibitions arising out of the Commonwealth
Trade Practices Act.
The
remainder of this article presents an analysis of these photo restrictions and
limitations. For a similarly detailed overview in an Australian context, you
may also wish to refer to Caslon
Analytics note on Unauthorised Photographs, along with this Australian Arts
Law Centre Unauthorised
use of your image article.
Anti-Voyeurism
Laws
The
situation in NSW used to be that if photos were taken of people without their
consent to provide sexual arousal or gratification, then photographers risked
being charged with Offensive Behaviour under Section 21G NSW
Summary Offences Act 1988.
Section
21G was however repealed
at the end of 2008. From 2009 onwards, "Peeping Tom" photography in
NSW is now addressed by Division 15B of the NSW Crimes
Act 1900, specifically the Voyeurism and related offences provisions in
sections 91I,
91J,
91K,
91L
and 91M.
Note
that Division 15B does not generally apply to everyday candid
photography. This is because its scope is carefully limited to (a) photographs
of a sexual and voyeuristic nature, usually of a person's private parts; (b)
taken without consent and (c) taken in places where a reasonable person would
reasonably expect to be afforded privacy (such as toilets, showers, changing
rooms, enclosed backyards etc.).
The
use of the word "reasonable" is crucial because it means the test for the expectation has to
be rational and objective. It has nothing to do with the
photographed person's feelings, thoughts, sensibilities, religious convictions
or paranoia. So if a subject is parading around naked in clear public view,
then they can hardly claim their privacy was violated if someone took their picture.
(See also beach
photography bans discussed below…)
BTW
if the photographs are indecent enough, then even if they were taken with
consent then they still may run afoul of the National Classification Scheme,
should they be published online or in a magazine.
"Uρskirting"
or "Dοwnblοusing"
Taking
general photographs without consent is one thing, but zooming in to snap a
person's private parts is specifically prohibited under Section
91L. Furthermore, in the case of private parts, the new test is not
limited to a reasonable expectation of privacy, but rather circumstances in
which a reasonable person would reasonably expect the person's private parts
could not be filmed.
This
is a significant difference, for it obliterates the no privacy in public places
defence. According to s.91L, the mere act of taking sexualised close-ups
of a person's private parts without their consent is sufficient. It is
irrelevant where the shots were actually taken: either through a person's
bathroom window or in the middle of a crowd at a sporting event, both cases are
now equally in breach of the NSW Crimes Act. Heck, even attempting to
take such photos is in breach of s.91L(6)!
Photo-peepers
and other telephoto creeps should therefore consider themselves warned. (FWIW see also the Wiki article
on Uρskirting.)
National
anti-voyeurism legislation?
In
Queensland, thanks to the child-photo antics of Paul Michael Bartram (in
particular his 2005 Children Swimming website ), amendments to the QLD Criminal
Code 1899 were introduced in November 2005, leading to s.227A Observations
or recordings in breach of privacy and s.227B Distributing prohibited
visual recordings, with s.227A(2) specifically targeting voyeurism and "uρskirting".
To
allay fears of inadvertently criminalising candid photography, Queensland's
227A(2) is specifically limited to … the observation or visual recording made
for the purpose of observing or visually recording the other person's genital
or anal region (emphasis added). Like NSW this exempts everyday shots of
people in crowds or bars or at the beach.
The
July
2006 SCAG meeting noted their intention of adopting the Queensland model
for nation-wide anti-voyeurism laws. NSW did it at the end of 2008, presumably
remaining states will follow ASAP.
Private
Land
Every
time you enter private land, you do so with the common law understanding that
you consent to any requirements the property's owner may impose upon you. So if
a property's owner (or their agent) tells you to cease taking photographs, for
whatever reason, then there is nothing you can do about it. Even if an area is
freely accessible to the public, a property's owner has full power of veto over
what happens on their land. Reattach that lens-cap and put the camera away.
The
law would say that once you own land you get to control what goes on there.
The
basic problem is that so much of our space these days is out of public hands
and in control of private enterprise. […]
[T]he
law recognises few public rights on private property. It is a very large debate
around the world. It has become a big issue in the US where shopping centres
can ban people wearing T-shirts with political slogans, and the courts have
sought to define quasi-public spaces.
Hence
the difficulty in taking photographs inside department stores; bars;
night-clubs; sports arena; shopping centres; "Kmarts" or
supermarkets. They may be areas freely open to the public and justifiably
regarded as the village square or commons of our time, but they are all private
land, and so come under the control and regulation of their owners. Which means
they can prohibit almost anything they like (including photography) on their
land and there is nothing you can do about it. Their turf, their rules. For
non-political discourse, No Bill of Rights in Australia = no Freedom of
Expression.
Supermarkets
have always balked at unauthorised photos. Even back in the 1980s I was once
escorted from a South Hurstville store for taking shots of an empty aisle…
Once
you leave the property however, there is no restriction on taking photographs
from outside. This was the finding in the 1937 Victoria
Park case, and it is still law. Thus for example the July
2006 photography ban at Melbourne's
Southgate Precinct was carefully limited to pictures taken inside
the centre. Even management admitted they were powerless to stop people from
photographing things outside.
What
if you take photos of a private space, publish them, and are then contacted
(threatened?) by the property owner, claiming you have no right to display or
sell images of their land? Frankly, ignore them. They may be able to restrict
you while the photos are being taken, but they cannot do anything once the
images have been captured (unless of course the photos are defamatory or
infringe trademarks, trade secrets etc). As noted earlier there is no general
right to privacy here, especially for publicly accessible areas. Furthermore in
Australia there is no concept of ownership over the appearance of architectural
spaces (see the copyright
discussion below).
BTW
publicly owned spaces such as nursing homes, schools, child care facilities or
hospitals are deemed by the NSW Inclosed
Lands Protection Act 1901 to have the same control rights as private land.
So don't imagine you can question someone's authority to prevent you from
taking photos on (say) hospital-grounds. It might be publicly owned land, but
the ILPA means authorised persons can regulate your behaviour while on
government property.
Weekend
Markets — caution
Occasionally
photographers contact me because they have been prevented from taking photos at
either Melbourne's Queen Victoria Market
or Sydney's Paddys Markets. Are
market proprietors allowed do this?
In
a nutshell — yes. Although stall-holders do not have property rights over the
space they occupy, the people who run and operate the markets — do. These
markets (and others like
them) are on private land, and consequently their owners can
prohibit almost anything they like. Furthermore, it is common knowledge that
many stall-holders deal in stolen or counterfeit
goods, so reticence in allowing lens-hounds to document this is
understandable =P
The
Sydney Paddys Market is a notoriously photo-unfriendly place. After I took this
picture I was greeted with furious hand-waving and shouts of "No Photo! No
Photo!"…
But
malls, markets etc. are public space!
No
they are not. Just because an area is publicly accessible, it does not also
mean it is public land. What confuses some Australians are United States cases
where people have won the right to hand out leaflets in malls: see <freedomforum.org/packages/first/freeexpression/index.htm>
Because
we lack any Bill of Rights protection in Australia, aside from the ACT or
Victoria, these precedents do not apply. Furthermore leaflets are one thing,
photography something else. Despite constitutionally protected Freedom of
Expression rights in the USA, their shopping centres are still photo-averse
places — see for example this Feb 2004
online discussion. Even a street redevelopment by The Petersen Companies in
Silver Spring has tried to
ban photography, much to the disgust
of US photographers.
As noted earlier
Australia is a signatory to the ICCRR, Article 19 of
which protects everyone's right to freedom of expression. Unfortunately the
treaty has not been incorporated into Australian law, so it is of academic
interest only.
What
about railway stations?
This
is a different story for they are public space (even if they are not,
technically speaking, public land). So provided you don't make a nuisance of
yourself, you should be fine. In 2004 the NSW Minister for Transport Services
spelled it out (at NSW
Legislative Council Hansard, 24 Feb 2004, p.6394, art.53):
It
is not an offence to take a photograph on a train or at a station.
Transit
officers are required to detect graffiti and other offences as they occur, as
well as protecting State Rail property from vandalism. I am advised taking
photographs of graffiti may indicate a connection between the person and the
graffiti they are photographing, as graffiti offenders often photograph their
work.
See
also the earlier Q&A in NSW
Legislative Council Hansard, 12 Nov 2003, p.4731, art.22.
In
2006 there was a lengthy discussion about this issue at Railpage Australia.
As many advised, apply a little common sense. If you are going to linger and
take formal photographs (eg. using a tripod or for publication), then contact
the Station Master first. For casual hand-held photography however — don't ask,
shoot.
Victoria?
South
of the border, down Melbourne way, Metro Trains take a much dimmer view. In
fact photography is expressly prohibited at Metro metropolitan railway
stations. The stations, platforms and rails might still belong to the Crown,
but unlike NSW they are controlled and are under the authority of a private company. You can however apply for
photography permits if you are a rail enthusiast or amateur photographer — see
the Metro website for more information.
Sydney
Harbour and foreshore
In
anticipation of the Sydney 2000 Olympics, the Sydney Harbour Foreshore
Authority Act 1998 was created to enable the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority to
regulate various matters concerning Sydney Harbour, its foreshore, Darling
Harbour, the Rocks, Cockle Bay etc.
The
Olympics came and went, but the legislation was retained and regulations
upgraded to create the current Sydney
Harbour Foreshore Authority Regulations 2006. Of particular interest to
photographers is Part 2 — Reg 4, which provides a long list of prohibited Commercial
and other activities including:
r4(b):
use [of] any audio, loudspeaker or broadcasting equipment or camera (whether
photographic, cinematic or video), for a commercial purpose, […]
Thus
despite being public land, any saleable photo taken in or around Sydney Harbour
(or the Rocks, Darling Harbour etc.) is forbidden without SHFA authorisation…
right?
Maybe
not. The exact meaning of commercial purpose is not defined in either Act or
Regs, while the language used in the Filming and Photography Application Form
(see the SHFA Permits and Applications web-page)
is clearly aimed at Film/ TV productions and (maybe) wedding photographers or
coffee-table book Pros — not casual photographers.
The
Cockle Bay promenade at Darling Harbour. Security guards can be zealous, but
they also tend to ignore casual hand-held photographers. Things get less
friendly if you try to set up a tripod…
So
relax. You only need to worry about SHFA permits if your photography requires a
film crew, portable generators and a couple of semitrailers. Otherwise the law
is, as far as the general public is concerned, more honour'd
in the breach than the observance.
Sydney
Luna Park
Has
its own special legislation, the Luna Park
Site Act 1990. Although public land, Luna Park is actually leased to and
under the control of a private company. Which means that like other
private land sites, they can arbitrarily prevent you from taking photographs or
even ask you to leave (see discussion above). Rather than
common law, the power to do this has been enshrined in Section
6G of the Act.
Notice
however the boardwalk/ foreshore exception in s6G(3), whereby the Luna Park
lessees can only control what happens within the boundaries of their
site. Meaning you are free to photograph from outside the exterior/ face/
buildings as much as you like, or more accurately, as much as permitted by the
Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority Regulations!
Assaulting
Photographers
Although
property owners may use reasonable force to evict people, they can never
threaten violence (assault), detain you at length (false imprisonment),
push you around and seize your camera or film (battery), or even force you to
delete digital files (coercion). Rent-a-cops, supermarket clerks, shopping
centre managers and even customers at a Haldon Street Cafe in Lakemba should
take careful note (see the "Hasselblad" tab in my Sydney
Unposed project).
In
recent years there have been a spate of attacks on photographers, and in every
case the assailants were charged with criminal offences:
- Feb 2006: Former politician Mark Latham was charged with assault, malicious damage and stealing after a press photographer snapped him and his children leaving a fast food restaurant.
- Dec 2005: A twenty-year-old was arrested and charged with malicious damage for assaulting St George and Sutherland Shire Leader photographer on Cronulla beach (in the lead-up to the pre-Christmas race riots).
- Nov 2005: Five men were charged with affray and assault after attacking a Channel Seven TV crew, who filmed them leaving a Melbourne terrorist suspects hearing.
What
is the law here? Threatening to damage your camera or equipment: s.199
of the NSW
Crimes Act 1900 — maximum penalty 5 years imprisonment. Threatening
violence against you: s.93C
of the same Act — 10 years. Even if someone tries to prevent you from
contacting the police: s.315A
or s.319
— 7 or 14 years.
The
moral should be fairly clear: an unwilling photo subject may only ask
you to stop taking photographs, that is all. No touching, pushing, shoving or
grabbing. Even Police
officers must institute legal proceedings (ie. detain or arrest you) if they
wish to seize your camera, film or digital files.
Common
sense dictates however that if a 150kg Goon starts Being Ominous, then it is
wise to go with the flow, even if it isn't legally justified. After all no
photograph is worth GBH!
Forced
deletion of digital files?
Obviously
if you take photos of security installations, military manoeuvres or of special
security lock-down zones, then duly authorised personnel can and most likely
will ask you to delete
photos.
My
earlier remarks about image deletion only apply to general photography taken
under everyday conditions (eg. at shopping centres, public parks, office
parties, people walking along the street etc.) Furthermore, it is unlikely that
anyone can ever compel you to erase images of people on the basis of
security concerns.
Assault
by Police
In
my experience NSW Police Officers do not mind having their photo taken. A lot
obviously depends on what they were doing at the time (eg. surveillance or
criminal activity), but generally speaking, when out and about on the street or
working at public events, Police officers will be friendly and will not
complain.
I
could have spent all day photographing police at the 2005 Swans Victory Parade
if I had wanted to. In fact I had to work hard to avoid officers hamming it up
in front of the lens…
So
much for the good news. The bad is that like the general public, there are
occasions when Police officers can misbehave, and even threaten or physically
manhandle a photographer for pointing a camera at them — see the incidents discussed by Tom
McLoghlin in Sept 2008.
Which
of course is unacceptable. If you have such an experience and wish to take
matters further, then I suggest you contact one of the options listed on the NSW Police Integrity
Commission complaints page. A word of warning though, make sure you have plenty
of evidence to support your claims. In particular get a note of the Police
officer ID(s) of the officer(s) involved. If possible also ensure the
officer(s) make an entry in their police notebooks about the particular
incident. You need the ID(s) to precisely identify the police officer(s),
whereas you need the notebook entries as evidence to establish that an incident
took place.
Can
Police arrest you for taking photographs?
If
you are annoying enough, then sure. See what happened to Sydneysiders Nick Holmes a Court, Oliver Hopes and Matt Khoury in 2008!
Generally
speaking, NSW Police have broad powers to arrest people,
typically if:
- They suspect on reasonable grounds that you have committed an offence;
- A warrant (written authority) for your arrest has been issued by a court;
- You have committed or are about to commit an offence;
What
would the "offence" be in taking photographs? Most likely it is to
[…] resist or hinder a police officer in the execution of his or her duty […],
as per Section
546C of the NSW Crimes Act 1900. With the 2009 Division 15B voyeurism amendments, they
could also say they suspect on reasonable grounds that photographers had or
were about to take close-up photos of people's private parts.
That's
the bad news. The good, especially if you read what happened on Tom
McLoughlin's blog above, is that Magistrates tend to dismiss these things when
they come to trial. See also the Oct 2009 wrongful-arrest finding and $40K
compensation payout to Andrea Turner after she was arrested for
photographing a NSW Police Officer on a train in Sydney's south. Consequently
it is safe to say you would have to be a real in-yer-face-photo-pest to be
saddled with a conviction.
In
the UK however, their notorious Section 76 can override any
magisterial tolerance. Due to terrorism concerns, photos of police in Merry Ol'
England can land you in gaol — see for example Photographer Films his own Anti-Terror
Arrest.
Why
the anti-photo angst?
Most
likely a mixture of commercial
use and copyright
ignorance, along with a dose of Baby Boom 2.0 Bambino
On The Brain. The recent proliferation of voyeur
websites has not helped either. Finally, photographers must also shoulder
some of the blame. For years we have wielded our cameras like
"weapons", so it should be no surprise that people eventually balked
at being "targets".
Whatever
the reason, the level of hostility has certainly increased in the last few
years. See the following examples:
- PopPhoto article: The War on Photographers, December 2008
- London Park Warden stops parents from photographing their own children, Dec 2007
- Denver photographer forced off bus for snapping a passenger, Sep 2007
- Harassed by Police for photography on playground, Mar 2007
- Magnum photographer Martin Parr harassed in Rio, Feb 2007
- Bogus petition to ban UK photo ID laws causes a moral panic, Feb 2007
- Talking Pictures: Photography Is Not A Crime, Feb 2007
- Confrontation Anecdote: "Middle-aged female jogger", Jan 2007
- Dupain beach snaps draw Police attention, Dec 2006
- Who's Your Daddy: Stranger danger, Oct 2006
- Was this a cheap shot?, Sept 2006
- I didn't realise people were so uptight, June 2005
Countering
misconceptions about illegality and immorality won't be easy. FWIW the
following tips may help: Adopt a professional attitude; Don't sneak or creep
about; Prepare a simple and rational answer to the question Why did you take
that photograph!?; Be clear and confident when confronted but not cocky or
argumentative; Always remember you have rights, but don't forget your subjects
have them too, especially on private land; Finally, it is always easier to put
your camera away than engage in street-lawyer shouting matches.
If
this sounds too touchy-feely and metrosexual, then fifty
push-ups before breakfast and a pair of steel-capped safety boots may also
help. Finally, download a copy of my PDF Rights info-sheet.
Other
Common Law
Injunctions may be sought to halt the
publication of photographs if the images are indecent, offensive or otherwise
demean the subjects (Lincoln Hunt Australia v. Willesee (1986) 4 NSWLR
456 at p.464). The depiction has to be clearly degrading though, saying you are
"embarrassed" or "uncomfortable" will be laughed out of
court — Donnelly
v Amalgamated TV Services (1998) NSWSC 509.
For
Nuisance or Trespass, merely taking a photo of someone is always
permitted. It only becomes an actionable Tort if you photograph the same person
again and again over an extended period of time (Bathurst City Council v
Saban (1985) 2 NSWLR 704 at pp.706-8). The occasional shot is okay, as is
pointing a camera over a fence, or even following people down the street, but
do it to the same person day after day and you're asking for trouble (not to
mention stalking charges
or maybe even a punch in the face).
BTW,
the no Tort of Invasion of Privacy doctrine is not fixed in stone. Already in ABC v Lenah
there were minority judgement hints that the High Court may
allow privacy-infringement claims in future (see also these 2003 articles
by David
Lindsay and Paul Telford).
Nevertheless
an Australian Privacy Tort is still a long way off — see Kallenbach, P. (2009)
Giller v Procopets the road to an Australian tort of privacy? Minter Ellison Newsletter. Although allowed in Grosse v
Purvis [2003] QDC 151 and Jane Doe v ABC and ors [2007] VCC 281,
both have proven to be weak precedents. They dealt with stalking, sexual
harassment and rape (hard cases make bad law), and both are lower-court
decisions limited to Queensland and Victoria. More significantly, higher courts
still refuse to challenge the majority in Lenah: Milne v Haynes [2005] NSWSC 1107, Giller v Procopets [2008] VSCA
236, Moore-Mcquillan v Workcover Corporation SA
[2007] SASC 55 and Kalaba v Commonwealth of
Australia [2004] FCA 763. Despite this, pundits (like retired Chief Justice
Murray Gleeson) still like to give the Lenah
barrow a little push every now and then.
The
"Kidman Defence"
Australian
celebrities face a problem in that they cannot
claim general privacy rights, yet they often wish to restrict photographs
of themselves when away from the public spotlight — eg. see Stan Grant and
Traci Holmes in Aug 2000.
So
what can they do? In January 2005 Nicole Kidman managed to obtain an interim Apprehended
Violence Order ("AVO") against Paparazzi photographer Jamie
Fawcett, via Part 15A of the NSW Crimes
Act 1900, by claiming she feared for the safety of herself and family (see Paparazzi ordered away from Kidman).
Although initially considered
a legal masterstroke, the AVO turned out to be flawed in that it only
prevented photographers from approaching within 20 metres, not from
taking photographs. Unsurprisingly the AVO was quietly dropped a while later.
Then
in January 2007 a "distraught" Kidman again called the Police against
Fawcett, this time claiming "harassment" during her
holidays at Bateman's Bay. In this case the Police sent an unmarked highway
patrol vehicle, to ensure everyone's safety on Rosedale's narrow roads, but
otherwise refused to restrict or lay charges against Fawcett.
So
what does this all mean? Not much.
You can rush to court or call the Police, but any legal relief in Australia
will be at best superficial, and will not directly address the issue of being
photographed without consent. OTOH in the UK, in May
2009 British performer Amy Winehouse won a general injunction on paparazzi
photographers and other persons unknown against following or
photographing her. Oh how I bet "Our Nicole" wishes she was in
London-town…
Consent
for photographs always required?
As
you can gather from the Kidman example above — not in Australia.
Aside
from commercial use
or Voyeurism issues,
consent for photography is not required in this country. It is purely a
question of etiquette and taste. As pointed out in the August 2005 Federal
Attorney General's Discussion Paper Unauthorised
Photographs on the Internet And Ancillary Privacy Issues, (as quoted on the
<anlysphere.com>
website):
[…]
for any society to function in a relatively free and open manner, there could
not realistically be a requirement for all photographs to be taken with
consent. If there were such restrictions, candid shots could never be taken,
and the media would be severely constrained in the images they show us. Freedom
of expression and artistic expression would undoubtedly be adversely affected …
while there may be legitimate circumstances when recording images should be
restricted, it would not be practical or desirable to obtain consent from every
person all of the time, for example, for use in television news file footage.
In
Nov 2005 this view was supported by the NSW
Commissioner for Children:
Even
the NSW Commissioner for Children, Gill Calvert, agrees that a ban on
photography without permission would be overkill. The commission has written to
the Government, saying that for any society to function in a free and open
manner, there cannot be a legal requirement for consent to being snapped.
(For
more on the AG's discussion paper, see further below. For
the aesthetics of photographing without permission, see the remarks on my Sydney Unposed critics article.)
Video
sidebar
Everything
on this page applies to video photography. After all, movies are just a stream
of individual still photographs.
The
only difference with video is the possibility of a sound component. Here there
is special law in NSW (and the ACT) which specifically prohibits the recording
of private conversations without consent. The emphasis is on private
conversations though — if someone is performing or yelling or whistling, then
presumably this falls outside the NSW
Listening Devices Act 1984. (See also the extensive review of the LDA by
the NSW Law Reform Commission in their Issues Paper 12 (1997) — Surveillance.)
So
although consent is not required for the general recording of video images,
it is required when recording sound to accompany them. That is why you
will often see hidden camera investigative TV reporting with the sound
deliberately turned off.
BTW
also keep in mind the consent provisions of the NSW
Workplace Surveillance Act 2005, even if it is specialist legislation
concerned solely with the filming of employees at work by their employers.
Photographs
of children — special case?
Generally
speaking, no.
Many
people assume parental consent must always be obtained when photographing
children. But aside from specific provisions in the Children
and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998 (especially child
protection orders arising from abuse, AVO's or custody proceedings),
children are not afforded unique legislative protection when it comes to
photographs, consent, privacy or defamation. As with adults you need a signed
release for commercial
use, but for non-commercial images — nothing.
Perhaps
the misconception arises from the child identity protection requirements of
s.11 of the NSW
Children (Criminal Proceedings) Act 1987 (which only apply to children
charged with criminal offences). Maybe it's because of the under-18 consent
provisions found in most Model Releases (a requirement for commercial usage
only). Maybe it's just a deep cultural loathing of child pornography?
Whatever
the case, photographers are — within the limitations outlined in this article,
in particular commercial
use and voyeurism
issues — perfectly at liberty photograph children as freely as any other
subject.
Photographing
children without consent is certainly a provocative
topic! Part of the reason school groups (see below) or Local Councils try to
ban photography at dances, plays or sporting carnivals is to protect children
from internet pedοphiles. Likewise many of the
submissions to the 2005
AG discussion paper referred to the need to "protect" children
from unauthorised use of their image on websites, blogs etc.
Yet
until the law changes, consent for general child photography remains purely an
ethical and moral issue, not a legal one.
Is
it only a matter of time before photos of anyone under eighteen will be
regarded as culturally verboten?…
Overview
of laws which may apply to child photography
The
Arts Law Centre of Australia has created a web-page and PDF which
explores all the possible Federal and NSW legislation which may apply when
taking (usually posed and/or commissioned) photographs of children. For more
information, see their article Children In The Creative
Process: Information For Artists And Arts.
In
June 2008 the Federal Senate Standing Committee on Environment,
Communications and the Arts held an inquiry into Sexualisation of children in
the contemporary media. As part of this, the Commission For Children and
Young People and Child Guardian created a 4-page fact-sheet called Tips for parents on photography of
children and young people — another detailed and useful summary of the laws
concerning child photography.
If
you would like to look more closely at the Division 15 — Child prostitution and
pornography provisions of the NSW Crimes
Act 1900, in particular s.91G
and s.91H,
then see also this
June 2008 blog entry by "Inkster".
Consent
does not trump "Obscene"
For
wannabe Sally Mann's, Jock Sturges' or Jill Greenberg's, please note that
consensual photographs, even if they are of your own children, will fall foul
of state
censorship laws if the underage subjects are photographed in a sufficiently
provocative or sexual manner. Furthermore, the recently added Section
578C of the NSW Crimes
Act 1900 may also be used to prohibit the publication of
"indecent" articles. There is however a defence in s.578C(6) if the
images have … any merit in the field of literature, art, medicine or science —
so presumably only blatantly pornographic images are covered. (N.B., in January
2010 the NSW Attorney
General announced that the NSW Crimes Act will be amended and the artist
defence will be removed. As of the date of this page this has still not
happened…)
To
date only two Australian photographers have been pinged for
"indecent" kiddie-pix, and in both cases either the prosecution
failed or the police backed away. The first example was with Connie Petrillo
in 1995, when as a West Australian art-student she sent naked photographs of
her three sons for processing at a Perth photo lab. After a lab worker
complained, the police raided her home and charged her with indecently
recording a child under the age of thirteen years. The matter eventually made
it to trial, but after two years it was dropped without a conclusive result.
The
second example concerned east-coast photographer Bill
Henson and his gallery representative Roslyn Oxley in May 2008. Again there
were police raids and the seizure of works, but this time no charges were laid.
There was however tremendous controversy, with proscriptive Shock-Jocks
berating laissez-faire Bohemians, and vice versa. Ditto a couple of months
later the attention-seeking use of Polixeni Papapetrou's image
of her daughter on the cover of Art Monthly Australia → Controversy
II.
Putting
aside questions of censorship, freedom, child exploitation and pedοphilia,
the lesson from these incidents should be fairly clear. Because our
constitution lacks general Freedom Of Expression guarantees (for non-political
discourse), if you cross the line with kiddie-pix, then get ready to be jumped on by The Men
In Blue.
In
the wake of the 2008 Henson Case, photographs of naked children have
understandably become a sensitive issue. Not only will the NSW Crimes Act will
be eventually amended to remove the artist defence (see above), but also the Australian
Council for the Arts has been prompted into releasing a discussion paper on
its draft protocols for working with
children in art. Unsurprisingly the protocols have generated a fair amount
of controversy, although it should be noted that they will only ever apply to
photographers who have, or seek, Australia Council arts funding. For more
discussion about this issue, see also the (somewhat one-sided) NAVA Art
Censorship Guide.
Finally
in NSW keep in mind that according to the Schedule
One - Code of Practice of the NSW
Children And Young Persons (Care And Protection — Child Employment) Regulation
2005, you cannot employ a child to run around naked during a shoot (note
that Henson did his work in Victoria).
Child
Protection and childcare worker's duty of care
The
Children
Legislation Amendment (Wood Inquiry Recommendations) Act 2009 No 13
requires people who work with children (teachers, child-care, DOCs officers
etc.) to exercise a duty of care to protect minors from a risk of significant
harm. The harm may be physical or psychological, and its risk may not even be
imminent. Merely a reasonable suspicion of risk is enough. Which means
that those who work with children must exercise a much greater level of care
than the general public when photographing minors, or else supervising children
who are being photographed.
(For
more detail about the 2009 legislation, see the NSW Government Keep Them Safe website.)
So
if you take candid photos of people at a large public event and school children
are involved, then their teacher will only be doing their job if they query
your shots. By law they have to, for if they don't then they may have to answer
allegations of Child Protection misconduct, even if the images turn out to be
benign.
Likewise
teachers should tread cautiously when photographing school performances or
games or especially swimming carnivals. Yes
the children and their parents may have consented to being photographed, and
there may also be no reasonable expectation of privacy (see the Voyeurism topic above),
but it only requires one disaffected student or suspicious adult to launch an
Ombudsman-supervised investigation.
Otherwise
teachers generally do have rights to photograph their own students while
on school property. Permission for this is typically included in the terms and
conditions that parents sign when enrolling their child in the school. If
parents object to photographs, then they must sign a declaration to that effect
(most don't bother).
Can
a teacher or authorised carer stop you — a member of the public — from taking
photographs due to child protection issues? No, not unless you are a employed
in one of the occupations listed in the Act. Because child protection
obligations are specifically limited to employees working in certain
child-related areas, non-employees (and therefore the general public) are
exempt.
Bans
at swimming carnivals, school plays or eisteddfods
Many
school and children groups prohibit all photography, even by parents (eg. the 2006 Coffs
Harbour Eisteddfod photo ban). Do organisations have any right to do this?
If the
performance is on private land, then yes they do — see the discussion above about property
owner rights. This also applies to schools and council-owned facilities, as
strictly speaking they are not public land even if they are publicly owned (ie.
not freely accessible to everyone like a street or park or beach). See the NSW
Inclosed Lands Protection Act 1901 and also the discussion at Sports Photography Legal Issues.
Organisations
may claim they wish to protect children, but the issue here is that people can
prohibit almost anything they like on land they control. If however the event
is held on property not owned or controlled by the organisers, then you are
free to photograph as much as you like — subject of course to other issues
discussed on this page. To put it bluntly, there is no person in Australia who
can legally prevent you from taking non-indecent photographs of your own
children on public land!
Some
organisers try to restrict performance photography due to copyright reasons.
This is a misunderstanding of IP law, for you cannot infringe the copyright of
a dramatic work by merely taking still photographs (see discussion below). You have to take
extensive video footage of a substantial part of the performance for
infringement to occur (see the Choreography G072 information sheet on the ACC
publications webpage.) This is incredibly unlikely if daddy only wants a
couple of shots of Tiffany's solo!
Let's
be honest though, many of these bans are rent-seeking in disguise. Organisers
try to prevent people from taking photographs by claiming Child Protection
Issues. Yet a visual record of the event is still required, so they hire their
own photographers. Now guess who pockets the sales of these official videos and
prints?…
Then
there is the vexed issue of sporting clubs trying to prevent parents from
photographing their own children during Saturday morning games — see for
example this June 2008 Channel 7
"Sunrise" program report. Just in case there is any confusion
here, no it is not (yet) illegal to take photographs of your own child. Sheesh.
In
2007 the Australian Sports Commission released an Acquiring and
Displaying Images of Children information sheet regarding photographs of
children at sporting carnivals. Although an interesting read, their
recommendations were not legally enforceable. What made the ASC Guidelines
noteworthy however was that Soccer NSW
adopted them as policy for a few weeks in 2007…
2007
Soccer NSW photo ban
In
May-June 2007 I received a few e-mails from concerned parents and soccer officials
about attempts to prevent parents from photographing their own children at
weekend soccer matches.
It
transpired that Football NSW had
aggressively adopted the suggestions in the ASC Child Guidelines (see above).
Misinterpreting the guidelines as black-letter law, FNSW issued a directive to
all NSW clubs that henceforth all "unauthorised" child sports
photography was forbidden.
Thankfully
due to behind-the-scene efforts by Christian Wright and Bob Kershaw,
the Policy was quickly rescinded in late May 2007 and the status-quo was
reinstated: ie. photography is no longer banned at NSW Soccer matches.
If an official still tries to prevent you from taking (legitimate) photographs,
then direct them to contact Michelle
Hanley at Football NSW. Of course security personnel at sporting arenas may
still prevent you from taking pictures, but that is a Private Property issue
(see discussion above).
Commercial
Use
Generally
speaking, if you wish to make commercial use of a person's likeness, then you
need to obtain their consent via a signed Model Release. If you don't, then you
have appropriated the person's likeness and they can, and most likely will, sue
for damages.
Commonwealth
Trade Practices Act
There
are two ways for a person to prevent the commercial use of their likeness
without their consent: either by the Common Law Tort of Passing Off, or
else via the Unfair Practices portion of the Commonwealth
Trade Practices Act 1974, (Part V — Division 1 — Section
52 and Section
53).
Passing
Off
This
is where you sue someone for appropriating your name or likeness to sell their
product. There are a number of famous cases — eg. Henderson v Radio Corp
[1960] S.R. (NSW) 576 or Hogan v Koala Dundee Pty Ltd (1988) ATPR 40-902
— but the basic point is that you initiate court action(s) to prove you have
suffered monetary loss by someone else's misappropriation of your reputation.
Needless to say it only makes sense to do it if you are famous, for not only is
litigation ruinously expensive, but you also have to prove you have a
substantial enough reputation to damage. The good news is that if you win, you
can receive serious compensation for losses you have sustained.
TPA
Unfair Practices
Unlike
Passing Off you don't launch an action against the offender, but rather
complain to the ACCC, who
investigate the infringement for you. If they decide to launch legal action,
then they have all the resources of a major Commonwealth Department to chase
the miscreants down. And
they don't take prisoners.
At
the end of the trial(s) the offender may have to pay court costs, fines (up to
$1M for corporations or $200K for individuals), destroy the offending material
and/or pay for advertising space to publish corrections or apologies. Keep in
mind that you won't see a cent of this, as all compensation is paid directly to
the ACCC. If you want damages then you have to launch the s52/53 action
yourself.
Are
unauthorised photos actionable?
They
are, but it took the courts a while to agree. Initially the Honey Case (Gary
Honey v Australian Airlines (1989) 14 IPR 264) found — by some rather
oblique and pedantic logic — that the mere unauthorised use of a person's photo
was not enough to construe "endorsement". Ditto the first Perkins
Swimming Cap Case (Talmax v Telstra Corp Ltd [1996] QSC
34).
Luckily
these narrowly legalistic interpretations were reversed on appeal in Perkins
II (Talmax
Pty Limited v Telstra Corporation Limited [1996] 2 Qd R 444). Henceforth
commercial use of a person's photo without their consent can be an
infringement of the TPA.
Do
you have to be famous?
On
the face of it s53(c) does not care, if someone merely represent[s] that goods
or services have sponsorship, approval, performance characteristics,
accessories, uses or benefits they do not have, then they have infringed the
Act. Yet a review of case-law, mainly featuring musical and sporting
identities, tends to suggest otherwise. See remarks by Clayton Utz solicitor Nicholas
Tyacke, along with remarks by ArtsLaw:
The
mere use of a person's image is unlikely to be found to mislead or deceive
under this area of law unless that person is a celebrity or well known endorser
of products. If a person is well known by the public as an endorser of products
then the unauthorised use of their image in connection with a product may
constitute misleading and deceptive conduct. This is because the public would
be lead to believe that the celebrity is endorsing the product.
I
would argue differently. If you follow the above logic then there is nothing to
stop a company from exploiting any non-famous person's image for unlimited
financial gain. Someone could take a photo of your mother and — without her
permission — put it onto millions of cake-mix boxes. Likewise a candid snap of
a girl on a beach could be freely used for a national billboard campaign for
tampons. Forever.
There
are good reasons why this has not happened. Marketers are fully aware that the
ACCC has a hair-trigger about this sort of thing. Legalism aside, the practical
application of Australian TPA law is no different to that in any other
civilised country: you cannot make commercial use of any person's likeness
without their consent. Ecce Nestlé.
What
is "commercial use" ?
In
a photographic context, commercial use does not mean the sale a picture,
but rather the use of a person's likeness to endorse some product or service,
or to entice others to buy it.
Here
are a few examples to make this clear:
- A photographer displays photos on their website and offers prints for sale. Non-Commercial — they are merely selling individual photographs, not using the people in them to endorse any product or service.
- A wedding photographer shows samples of their work on their website. Commercial — they are using images of people to endorse or sell their wedding photography services.
- Fizzy drink manufacturer runs a magazine-ad featuring a candid photo of someone drinking a can of their product. Commercial Use — they are trying to sell a beverage. Requires a signed Model Release.
- Telephone company re-purposes editorial photographs of an Olympic swimmer or people being rescued from floods, for use in ad-campaigns. Ditto — they are trying to sell phone services.
- National Tourist body
holds a competition to solicit photographs of people enjoying Australian
scenery, for use in an ad-campaign. Despite carefully worded indemnities
in the competition rules, this is still Commercial
Use — they are trying to sell tourism services.
(Aside: over the last decade many photography competitions have become little more than a thinly veiled scam to obtain free content. For example notice how the Tourism Australia T&C does a full-rights grab in Clauses 11 & 12 for all images submitted. That this swindle has not been exposed more aggressively by the mainstream media should not be surprising — they are in on the scam as well: see Read the Fine Print by Jon Reid. ) - Art exhibition sells prints or posters or postcards. Non-Commercial — they are not selling anything other than the photo itself. (However it will become a commercial use if the posters are used to entice people to visit the show.)
- Photographs are sold for publication inside a book or magazine, but not as part of an ad. — eg. monographs, editorial illustration, celebrity gossip, tutorials, how-to articles etc. Non-Commercial — no release required. (Rex Dupain having everyone in his 2010 book sign media releases had, I suspect, more to do with circumventing defamation claims than inappropriate commercial use.)
- A photograph is published on a book or magazine cover. Commercial as the image is used to entice people to buy something, in this case the book or mag. (BTW this is why you almost never see candid-people photos used as magazine cover illustrations.)
Remember,
the mere sale of a picture does not make its use commercial. A
person's likeness has to be used in such a way that it appears they endorse
some product or are trying to entice others to buy something. Which
ultimately makes sense, as photographers sell thousands of people-images to
newspapers and magazines every day. Ditto the publications themselves, who
legitimately sell thousands of people-images directly to the public (eg. Fairfax or News Limited).
For
more discussion about commercial use in a photographic context see: the ASMP Model Release Tutorial;
the UK and Ireland Editorial Photographer's article on Creative Commons;
Carolyn E Wright's PhotoAttorney
Blog; Dan Heller's (long) Model Release Primer;
and Sarah Skinner's article on the Salome
Belly Dancing website (!)
Posting
photos of old school friends on your website is okay, but you are asking for
trouble if you try to use the images commercially…
Commercial
Use case study: Virgin Mobile "areyouwithusorwhat?"
In
June 2007 Virgin Mobile Australia launched an exciting and impactful PDF file multi $100K billboard and internet campaign
to tout their SMS-TEXT services in Australia. What made it noteworthy PDF file was that they
illustrated their hip and groovy ads with creative commons pictures
appropriated from Flickr, without the photographers' knowledge or
permission. A lot of the images also featured close-up and clearly identifiable
depictions of people (eg. Molly E. Holzschlag PDF
file or Alison Chang PDF file), again without their knowledge
or consent.
Despite
assertions the photos were used legitimately via Flickr's Creative Commons
License, the fact is Virgin never obtained consent from any of the photo
subjects. Yet the Flickr license only applied to the
photographer's copyright, not the subject's consent to use their likeness.
Thus: (1) the images were used to sell products and services and (2) the
photo-subject's consent was never obtained. Therefore the ads were in direct
contravention of the TPA, and considering the magnitude of the campaign, prompt
action could then have been expected of the ACCC to injunct and fine the things
out of existence.
Or
so it would seem, except for one serious problem — either by accident or design
the people-photos were not taken in Australia and neither the photographers
nor subjects were Australian citizens. Which put them beyond the scope of
the TPA or any other Australian legislation. If the photographs were taken
here, then the subjects would have a case. If they were taken overseas of
Australian citizens, then again people might have a legitimate complaint. But
foreign persons + foreign photographers + foreign locations?… Nyet.
(Mind
you it didn't stop Ambulance Chasers from trying PDF file.)
Luckily
the campaign created such an international stink that Virgin Mobile had to act.
Despite the letter-of-the-law compliance, on July 25th the ad-copy was reworked
and all identifiable images of people were removed PDF file.
Furthermore, a few weeks later Virgin Mobile then abruptly terminated the
campaign PDF file and ghost-towned the AYWUOW website.
So
in case you missed it, the moral of this story is very simple: Always Get A
Signed Release From Any Person Whose Image You Wish To Use In Advertising.
(Duh.)
Sample
Model Release forms
See
the following URLs for examples of (mostly) Australian release forms. Use them
as a guide when creating your own:
- Art Forum Australia Model Release
- Lonely Planet generic Model Release
- Reed Creative Services Standard Photography Forms
- Australian Portraits Talent Release form
- Arts Law Centre of Australia Photographer's Model Release
What
about Property Releases?…
Broadly
speaking, Property Releases are not required in Australia to photograph
buildings or private land. See the Arts Law Centre Do
I need a Film Location Release? web page and also further below for
architectural photography copyright exceptions.
NSW
and Commonwealth Privacy Acts
Owing
to federal/state jurisdiction and constitutional issues, both federal and state
Privacy Acts are limited to the regulation of Government Departments and large
corporations (ie. only those with an annual turnover of more than $3 million).
Therefore
current privacy legislation does not apply to the taking and display of
photographs by individuals.
As the
NSW Privacy Commissioner noted in 2004:
Privacy
laws, which deal with the handling of personal information, don't generally
regulate the behaviour of individuals.
Even
if legislation was extended beyond corporations and departments, candid
photography would still fall outside its scope, for current law is aimed at the
collection, storage and transmission of public records (such as address,
health, credit reports or financial details etc.), and not the blanket
concealment of people's intimate lives — see this Commwealth Privacy overview,
as well as the index
of Federal Privacy Commissioner cases.
Occasionally
Privacy Commissioners attempt to insert general photography into the Act's
scope — so far without success. For example on the Federal Privacy Commissioner's
website, you will find a bland statement that photography is covered
by the Cth Act. Unfortunately they fail to specify just what kind of
photography (editorial, candid, personnel records?). Similarly in 2000 there
was an attempt in Hong Kong to broaden Privacy
Legislation to include photographs — it failed.
In
2005 the Commonwealth Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee
conducted a thorough review of the Commonwealth Privacy Act 1988. In
June 2005 they published their report. Despite rumours of restricting
certain kinds of photography due to fears
raised by camera-enabled mobile phones, the 186 page report barely
mentioned photography at all, and even then only in a medical record or
biometric security context.
Meanwhile
state attorneys-general and privacy commissioners regularly circulate papers
calling for restrictions on all unauthorised photography (eg. 2005,
2006).
Luckily things have not gone that far — yet. For as many commentators have
remarked for many years, the Privacy Act is thankfully not a defacto
Secrecy Act.
What
about Press or Privacy Council guidelines? Frankly they don't apply to
non-members or (again) individuals. At best they are recommendations only, not
enforceable obligations arising out of Law.
2006-9
LRC Privacy reviews
In
2006-9 both the NSW
Law Reform Commission and the (federal) Australian Law
Reform Commission reviewed the current state of Privacy law. Both produced
lengthy papers which, among many other things, proposed the creation of a Statutory
Cause of Action for Breach of Privacy to protect individual privacy rights
(eg. NSWLRC R120,
Recommendation 4 and ALRC 108, Recommendation 74).
To
balance freedom of expression concerns raised by artists and the media, both
LRC's also recommended the creation of a Public Interest defence to use as an
exception to new privacy right.
So
if you film a person or publish photos of them on the internet, without their
consent, then it is proposed they would now have statutory rights to take you
to court for Breach of Privacy. In order to avoid damages or injunctions, you
would have to argue that your actions were in the public interest. A sad
development this: it took decades to get rid of the hopelessly subjective
public interest test in NSW Defamation actions, now lawyer-academics
nostalgically wish to bring it back.
Thankfully
Law Reform Commission proposals are only speculative recommendations by
academics, and fall a long way short of being law. It is also important to
remember that Law School bookshelves groan with LRC reports which were never
implemented. Nevertheless in April 2008 The
Australian newspaper reported that the new Federal Labor Government were
considering adopting the bulk of the ALRC reform proposals. Wait and see…
( Presumably
this is why Google Australia rushed
into photographing their Google Maps Street View
panoramas of Australian cities in November 2007. Even if the LRC Privacy
recommendations do eventually get adopted, it is unlikely they will apply
retrospectively. )
Meanwhile
see below for more
detail on the Australian Law Reform Commission report released in August 2008.
Abuse
of Privacy examples
For
those who like to worry about invasion
of privacy, have a look at how professionals really do it:
(1)
CCTV Public Surveillance
Let's
get the obvious one out of the way quickly. Every time you walk into a bank,
railway station or supermarket, you are photographed by CCTV Surveillance cameras.
Every time you walk across the Harbour Bridge or go to the cricket at the SCG,
your snapshot ends up on a disc. Visiting the Sydney Casino? Glance up and wave
at the dozens of high-rez cameras watching you from the ceiling.
Like
most global-economy cities, it is impossible to go five minutes in Sydney and
not have your photo taken by a security camera. And do not imagine they are
low-resolution B&W shots typical of 1980's technology. Think instead of
close-up zooms of your face (or bust or crotch), in colour, from any angle.
(2)
Australian-Records website
For a mysteriously unspecified
dollar-amount, you will have access to complete research tools for
obtaining private information about practically anyone from the privacy of your
own home or office. Whereby you can do unlimited searches on anyone to see
their Criminal and Court Records, Marriage and Birth certificates, or even
reverse-search on phone numbers, car license-plates or e-mail addresses. How
very handy. See a busty MILF drive past in a Subaru WRX? Note down her
license-plate and look her up online, From The Privacy Of Your Own Home Or
Office…
(3)
Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace etc.
Social
networking sites offer a free and easy way to set up web pages and keep in
touch with friends. But first you have to register, whereupon you must supply
details of your name, age, education, address and — either directly or
indirectly — favourite film, TV, music, book and food preferences etc.
Therein
lies a marketers' El Dorado. Countless millions of
school kids and twentysomethings conscientiously tapping away about their likes
and dislikes, just begging to be sorted and analysed by Eastern Suburbs
Marketing Creeps.
Some
people are savvy about this and intentionally give false biographical detail
(eg. widow, 72, pensioner), whilst others block
access to their pages to non–friends. Unfortunately most aren't so
cautious, so they chat and post in the open, much to the brand consultants'
delight. Facebook also has a habit of de-registering
false profiles, along with aggressively selling their data behind the scenes,
so the privacy vs. profit permutations are
endless.
(4)
IP address tracking
Every
computer on the internet must have a unique IP
address (eg. yours is "119.225.16.50" ). This is required
by networked machines so they can identify themselves when passing messages —
ie. "packets" — between each other. They are built into the TCP-IP
header of every packet, and cannot be suppressed or (easily) faked. Which
means your computer's IP is exposed every time you access a website, do a
web-search, buy something online or post a comment to a blog. Although by
itself an IP is just an anonymous number, interact with a website often enough
and the webmaster can assemble a detailed profile of your computer's visits
(how do you think Amazon or Google target their advertising?).
The
good news about IP tracking is that it allows the
police to nail evil-doers. It also allows server-guys to study and optimise website traffic.
But tracking also has privacy implications in that it is done without your
knowledge and that your every move on a website is exposed and can thus
be recorded, whether you like it or not. The sheer intrusiveness of this can be
staggering. Do a Google search; post a SMH
comment; browse for books at Amazon; or even visit a girlfriend's Facebook
page… and your IP address, the time of your visit, anything you write and all
the pages viewed will be stored
for later analysis.
Recent
developments are even more refined. By using Deep Packet Inspection (DPI)
technology, web marketers can also track your movements on unrelated websites
even after you leave their site — see the 2009
controversy surrounding BT's use of Phorm's behavioural advertising system.
(5)
Global Shunning
He-said-she-said
and a teenage girl commits suicide. A neighbourhood
family is implicated but no charges are (initially) laid. Outraged friends/
citizens/ weekend-vigilantes start a campaign to ostracise the people they
think responsible. So far so ordinary, except this time it has a global reach.
Every detail of the accused family (photos, address, business clients) is
published online for the entire world to gawk at and abuse, ad infinitum.
Having
your photo taken on a public beach is one thing, but having your name, age, home address and exact GPS
co-ordinates published on rottenneighbour.com, to act as an lightning-rod
for millions of angry people, is something else.
(6)
The valuation page at "My House Value"
Under
the guise of providing free home valuations, the online estimator at My House Value insists you
give your full name, address and contact details. Now read their (well concealed)
terms and
conditions:
[…]
We advise that myhousevalue.com.au Pty Ltd may, from time to time, receive a
fee for providing your personal information to real estate professionals in your
area […]
…
and then admire their privacy policy:
[…]
You invite Us and Our sponsors and agents to use Your personal information for
marketing purposes. This includes contacting You by telephone, mail or e-mail
to discuss products and services […]
If
this isn't personal-data harvesting to generate leads for Real Estate Agents,
and thus outrageously against the spirit and intent of Privacy guidelines and
legislation, then I'll eat my/ your/ everyone's hat.
Defamation
Until
the introduction of nationally uniform defamation laws on January 1st 2006,
even lawyers considered Defo a hopeless
quagmire. Thankfully the new NSW
Defamation Act 2005 (and its state equivalents) has — finally — swept away
the judicial waffle and archaic dross.
Relatively
speaking it is still early days, so the law has yet to be rigourously tested
(eg. see Channel
Seven Adelaide Pty Ltd v Manock [2007] HCA 60 and Bingle
v Emap Australia [2006] FCA 1704). There is also little commentary online;
for the moment see this ABC Mediawatch
10th April 2006 transcript, or this March 2006 overview by AAR.
Meanwhile Perfecting Polly Peck: Defences of
Truth and Opinion… by Andrew T Kenyon is also worth a look for its detailed
analysis of Truth as a defence.
Meanwhile,
how does the new legislation impact on photographers?…
The
truth will (finally) set you free
For
decades in NSW you also had to show Public Interest if you wished to claim
Truth as a defence. Not any more. Thanks to the new s.25
and s.26,
truth alone is now sufficient. Which means provided you stay clear of
re-enactments, digital mayhem, unflattering captions or Lara-Bingle-speech-bubbles,
then it will be extremely difficult to construe unmanipulated photography as
defamatory anymore. Hence the notorious penis photographs in Ettinghausen v
Australian Consolidated Press would not be actionable today.
Claimant
must have a "reputation" to defame
Defamation
is ultimately a form of censorship to protect the interests of the Ruling
Elite, not those of the general public. This principle has been enshrined in
the new Section
33 defence of "Triviality". So if a mere commoner objects to your
photo, then it is unlikely they will take it further because they lack a
substantial enough reputation to damage. Poke fun at the nobility however, and
you can expect a lot of trouble in a very short space of time. (Oh how I wish I
was kidding here…)
Universal
Jurisdiction
Keep
in mind that thanks to the controversial 7-0 decision in Dow Jones & Company
Inc. v Gutnick [2002] HCA 56, you may be still be liable for defamation in
Australia if you publish your content overseas, or even on the remote planet
where High Court Justices live.
Do
Unto Others…
Legislation
and case-law aside, use a little common sense. Whenever you take a photo of
someone, ask yourself is it the kind of thing you wouldn't mind others taking
of you. The bloke picking his nose; the other scratching his crotch; the
Bogan
shrieking at her kids… Ask yourself: do you really need to humiliate people in
order to make a point?
When
does irony and social criticism cross over into something less benign?…
Copyright?
Alongside
ignorance about the Privacy Act(s), one of the commonest misconceptions
about photography is that it can be prevented due to copyright. This is
incorrect — no part of the Copyright Act prohibits any kind photography!
Copyright only applies to the
published duplication of original works, such as books, paintings, dramatic
works, prints, drawings, motion pictures, DVDs, audio recordings etc.
In
Australia still-photographs of 3D objects such as performances, buildings,
statues or interior spaces (and the people in them), generally cannot
infringe copyright, as one-off images cannot reproduce a substantial enough
portion of the original work. The only way to infringe copyright in these cases
is to create a sufficiently similar 3D copy, or with respect to dramatic works,
lengthy video recording (eg. see the Choreography G072 information sheet on the
ACC
information webpage.) The same kind of thing applies to the performers'
rights of actors or musicians during a performance — it is almost
impossible to infringe these by merely taking an occasional still photograph.
(FWIW many thespians and producers disagree with me on this point — see the Aug
2007 discussion at Theatre
Australia. All I can say is: download and read the relevant ACC
information sheets!)
All
these principles have been adopted by the Commonwealth
Copyright Act 1968. See for example Part III — Division 7 Acts not
constituting infringements of copyright in artistic works, especially Section
66:
The
copyright in a building or a model of a building is not infringed by the making
of a painting, drawing, engraving or photograph of the building or model or by
the inclusion of the building or model in a cinematograph film or in a
television broadcast.
Thus
due to our s.66 exemption, the internationally notorious SABAM
Atomium building copyright heist would be very difficult to mount here.
Unfortunately the Sydney Opera House Trust hasn't got the idea yet — see Peter
Black's June 2007 analysis of (ab)using intellectual property law to
restrict SOH photographs.
Furthermore
according to s65
of the Act, a similar kind of exemption applies to photography in publicly
accessible places where sculptures or other copyrightable works are otherwise
than temporarily displayed.
So
when a Sydney Opera House guide or a Paddys Markets Wigs-stall owner waves
their arms and rushes towards you yelling: You can't take photographs because
of Copyright! — smile and shake your head, because clearly they have no
idea what they're talking about =)
Outwitting
security guards to take photographs at the Sydney Opera House can be a serious
test of resourcefulness…
For
further discussion about Copyright in an Australian context, see the Information
Sheets index on the Australian Copyright Council (ACC) website. In
particular see the Duration G23 and Photographers G11 publications, under the D
and P index headings.
Finally,
unlike The United
States or England, there is no need
to register Copyright in Australia for an author's copyright to vest.
Ownership
sidebar
Since
30 July 1998 the photographer owns full copyright in their images, even
if they were commissioned by a third party (see ACC info
sheets G058 and G035). There are a couple of caveats though. By Section
35(4) of the Act, copyright is owned by your employer if the image was
taken as part of your job. Alternatively by Section
35(5), if the photograph was commissioned (by agreement and for money) for
a "private or domestic purpose" — such as a family portrait or
wedding or birthday party — then the client owns copyright, unless there
is agreement to the contrary.
This
exception is not as arcane as it seems. Say you were invited to a take
photographs at a childrens birthday party. The Alpha Mom pays you $50 to
cover expenses. You take the shots and one of them is a once-in-a-lifetime
masterpiece. Guess who owns the copyright to the image according to s35(5)?…
Not
you.
Duration
sidebar
Australian
copyright law changed radically in May 2004 after signing the Australia-USA
Free Trade Agreement. Of particular interest is the situation which now
applies to photographs taken prior to 1955. Due to the AUSFTA, all such
images are now deemed to have their Copyright expired . (See also p.4 of
the Duration G23 ACC publication above.) Which means, for example, that Frank Hurley's or Max
Dupain's best work, and all of Harold Cazneaux's, are now in the
public domain and can be freely appropriated, reproduced and sold at will (!)
Trademark
protection?
What
if you take a photo of a person wearing a T-Shirt or standing in front of a
poster which has (say) the Nike or Coca-Cola logo? Can the corporation take
action to prevent you from infringing their trademark?
Generally
speaking in Australia, they cannot. Everything hinges on the context of
how your photograph is used. If it is shown on a website photo gallery or
printed in a magazine as part of a monograph, then there should not be an issue
as the mark is not used for goods or services in respect of which the trademark
is registered. If however the image is used commercially on (say) a T-Shirt,
and the corporate logo is prominent enough, then there may be cause for the
trademark owner to claim dilution of their brand, since — for example — Nike or
Coke sell T-Shirts too. See this Bond Law
Review article by Lynne Weathered, and also the remarks by Lien Verbauwhede
on the WIOP
website.
Alternatively,
can someone prevent you from taking photographs because they have registered a
trademark in a cityscape or building? Looking at famous
USA examples, this appears very unlikely. See for example the failed
attempts to trademark the The Rock Hall of Fame,
or the Lone Cypress at Pebble Beach golf course.
It
is partly because of the above failed cases that the H.R.683: The Trademark
Dilution Revision Act of 2006 was passed by the US
Congress in April 2005.
In
January 2008 Ford USA became the first corporation to flex their new trademark
muscles when they learned the Black Mustang
Club wanted to publish a wall-calendar featuring photos of Ford motor
vehicles. There was no argument over the copyright of the images (they were
legitimately taken by the club), Ford merely said they owned the intellectual
property of the look and appearance of their cars — see this overview on the BMC
discussion forum. Thankfully a week later Ford realised the international
damage they inflicted on their brand. Panic + Meetings + Mea Culpa +
Press-releases = BMC were free to publish
their calendar again. ( No wonder the Ford
clowns needed a government bailout at the end of the year. )
It
is difficult to take a casual photo in an urban environment and not include
someone's brand. Thankfully Australian Trademark law has not developed as
aggressively as in the United States…
Beach
candids banned?
This
was a Hot Topic in 2005. It arose from the arrest,
guilty plea and $AUD 500 fine imposed on Peter James MacKenzie in November
2004, for secretly photographing topless women with his mobile-phone camera on
Coogee beach.
In
the following months there was a lot of concern and commentary about this (I
was even interviewed off-air by a producer of the 702 ABC Sydney morning radio
program). Although most critics considered PJ's actions offensive, even legal
academics agreed that people could not expect any sort
of privacy on a public beach. Furthermore, many worried about the
incident's broader implications in perhaps
banning all candid photography on Sydney's Beaches.
Luckily
things never went that far. Wiser and cooler heads prevailed. When in February
2005 a couple of university students — Gaur and Singh — were similarly charged
for (again) taking mobile phone photographs of topless girls at Coogee beach,
Police prosecutors this time withdrew all charges, and on April 5th Magistrate
Lee Gilmour formally dismissed the case.
That
is the good news, the bad is that on certain high-profile beaches, Police
officers, council rangers and surf lifesavers still remain
photographer-adverse, if not downright hostile. This is illustrated by the extensive questioning of Rex Dupain by
four Police officers in December 2006, for attempting to photograph
sleeping backpackers on Bondi beach. Similarly in 2009 another photographer was
instructed by police to leave Mooloolaba beach because someone had complained
about pictures
being taken of beach-volleyball players. Ditto Mooloolabah (again) on Christmas Day 2010.
Sigh.
At least the hair-trigger reactivity has put photographers on notice to Behave
Themselves. If self-restraint isn't enough, there are always the 2009 anti-voyeurism laws to help focus
people's minds.
Surf
Life Savers ban photography?
In
November 2005 there was a flurry of indignation when the Sydney
Morning Herald reported the SLSA wished to ban beach photography,
especially at surf carnivals where young swimmers (nippers) were involved.
A
few weeks later Shellharbour photographer Barry Daniel contacted Sean
O'Connell, Surf Life Saving Australia's
Communications Manager, for their view on the media coverage. The following was
Mr O'Connell's (edited) response:
[…
November 29th, 2005 …]
The
story in the Herald did not quite state our position correctly.
We
have made a submission to
the Standing Committee of Attorneys General who are currently reviewing the
issue of unauthorised imagery on the internet. Our position is that while we
support the rights of legitimate photographers and have no wish to hinder them,
we also have a responsibility to our youngest members. Our submission contained
a draft photography policy which would inform our members of their rights and
responsibilities in this area. Generally our advice is that if our members are
concerned that inappropriate photographs are being taken, they should report
the person to the appropriate authority.
In
any event, we are now waiting for the outcome of the inquiry to finalise our
policy and I will certainly [communicate the decision] when the outcome is
known.
So
the SLSA's ban on beach photography was merely a submission to a Cth government
discussion paper — nothing more.
SLSA
Photography Policy (draft)
In
March 2008 the SLSA finally circulated a draft copy of their much anticipated
Photography Policy. To the surprise of many the language in the draft was quite
moderate and reasonable. Indeed the initial paragraphs read like a summary of
the arguments presented in this photo-rights article!
A
discussion topic on the policy has been created at DPReview.com. See there
for commentary and also to download a copy of the draft in PDF format.
Surf
Life Saving Queensland Photography Policy
While
(still) waiting for SLSA to finalise their photo policy, have a look at the
policy concocted by SLSQ in March 2006. See their downloadable PDF file, listed on
their Policies
page.
Hmmm…
take a pinch of misunderstood Child Protection issues and add liberal amounts
of Paranoia, Rights Grab and Fascism… Time for a reality-check guys. We know
some Clubbies like to believe they own the beach and everything that happens on
it, but I hope SLSQ are aware their Photography Policy is little more than an
ambit claim. It is totally unenforceable on non SLSQ members with respect to
activities which take place on public land.
Council
Attempts to Ban Photography
Waverley
Council
In
late 2004 Waverley local council tried to ban all "unauthorised"
photography at all of its beaches (Bondi, Coogee etc.). To the council's
dismay, this caused tremendous uproar, with many reminding the Council that,
er, they didn't quite have the right to prohibit any photography in public
areas! Only the NSW State Government can do this (and politically it is
unlikely they ever will).
A
couple of weeks later the Council reluctantly agreed. On January 16th 2005,
Deputy Mayor George
Newhouse admitted during a 6pm Channel 7 Sydney TV news
report that, yes, it was impossible to ban photography on public
beaches. Nevertheless, the council
were going to try to restrict photography anyway by giving Surf Lifesavers
the right to ask certain "unauthorised" photographers to leave the
beach.
No
problems with that, but it turned out to be a moot point anyway, as the council
failed to pass the anti-photography motion in early February 2005.
However
in December 2006, Waverley Council found a different way to pursue their
anti-photography agenda. Following the Police seizure of Rex Dupain's camera on
Bondi Beach, it transpired that Waverley insisted on photography permits
for $160 an hour. Years later they elaborated their pay-per-shoot policy into a
detailed schedule of fees — see this web page summary by Arts Freedom
Australia and Harry Phillips. Admittedly they have improved the legality of
their position by only insisting on fees from professionals, but there is still
a question about the legitimacy of local Council permits for activities
conducted on public (ie. NSW State owned and controlled) land. For
discussion about this, see Ross Barnett's photography blog.
Bondi
Beach has practically become a photographer's no-go area. Things were already
tense in 2003 when I took this shot of young girls mucking around in the sand.
Nowadays I would not even dream walking along this beach with a camera…
Randwick
Council
Taking
their cue from Waverley Council, in February 2005 Randwick passed a motion banning parents from
taking photographs of their own children at council owned swimming
pools. If parents wanted pictures, then they could only obtain them, at $5 a
print, from council or school accredited photographers.
Public
Uproar Revisited. This time Mayor Murray Matson stood his ground. His
colleagues — didn't. Support for the measure wavered and then evaporated. A few
days later a new meeting was held, a rescission motion was passed, and the policy was
officially suspended pending a report by Council Officers. No prizes for
guessing its re-adoption was not recommended.
You
have to hand it to Randwick though. Unlike Waverley they were clever enough to
limit the prohibition to council property only, and not general public
land. This would have made court challenges very difficult, for property owners
have broad rights to restrict whatever happens on their land (see discussion above). T'is Very Tricky.
Not coincidentally, it was also a handy way to turn a quick buck ($5 X
thousands of children = potentially a nice little earner).
Council
digital camera use
Many
councils attempt to prohibit "unauthorised" photography on the basis
of privacy or protecting children, but interestingly they have no qualms when
taking candid photos themselves.
In
March and June 2006 a number of reports appeared (eg. ABC Sydney, Sydney
Morning Herald) noting that many councils equip their officers with digital
cameras to record parking hazards and infringements; traffic violations;
illegal rubbish dumping etc. It was claimed such photography was done for
evidentiary purposes, to make proving cases easier should council fines be challenged
in court.
Okay
— but people who appear in such images have obviously not had their
permission obtained. Indeed most pictures were taken surreptitiously to prevent
alleged malefactors from being alerted. In which case, isn't this identical to
the kind of unauthorised/ invasion of privacy activity councils wish to ban in
the first place? Or is their idea of "authorised" carefully limited
to only mean "authorised by them?
Or
to put it more cynically, maybe it is just another bureaucratic example of:
When revenue is at stake — do as we say, not as we do.
Other
Restrictions
What
about NSW recording devices or NSW
Workplace Surveillance legislation? Neither apply as the former is limited
to sound recordings and telephone taps, whereas the latter is only concerned
with the misuse of surveillance cameras in places of employment. What about performer's
rights? In this case we have a copyright issue, dealing
with the recording performances by musicians and actors — hardly relevant when
taking the occasional still photograph of everyday people.
Keep
in mind court orders prohibiting photography and/or the publication of
images can also be obtained in child custody and protection matters or
witness protection. I personally encountered this while taking general
photographs of a spectator
crowd at a football match in July 2003. After a few shots, a woman screamed
at me and ran 50m down stairs demanding to know who I was, why I was taking
pictures etc. It turned out a seven year-old in her custody was subject to a
child protection order, and photographs of him were prohibited by court order.
No problem, I made a note and used a different image. Couldn't help wondering
though about the wisdom of taking such a child to a public event bristling with
cameras and media coverage…
Here's
a tip from an experienced photographer: don't attend large public gatherings if
you don't like others taking your photograph…
The
overseas experience
A
worldwide review of photo-privacy law is well beyond the scope of this article.
For a general introduction, see the excellent overview of
Privacy law in various international jurisdictions by the Hong Kong Law
Reform Commission (2004).
New
Zealand
Arising
out of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, in 2004 there was a
watershed case (Hosking
v Simon Runting [2004] NZCA 34) which found that in some circumstances
photography in New Zealand could be an invasion of privacy. It was a
fascinating departure from existing NZ law, and has subsequently been
reaffirmed and even extended by R v Rowe (CA
374/04, 18 April 2005). Thankfully neither case has any application in
Australia as we do not have an equivalent to the NZBoRA (outside of
Victoria). It is something to keep an eye on though, as photo-ban advocates
keep referring to it in a hope it will influence the development of Aus.
privacy law.
Canada
In
Canada, photographers are still coming to grips with the Aubry
v. Éditions Vice-Versa (1998) 1 SCR 591 decision, where Gilbert Duclos had to
pay damages to a subject in one of his candid pictures (Pascale-Claude Aubry,
then 17, sitting on the steps of Scotiabank) for invading her privacy. The
image was used to illustrate an article Inside and Outside the Glass house by
Giose Rimanelli, in the Issue #24 June 1988 edition of
Vice-Versa magazine. Many argue the precedent only applies in Quebec, but
read the judgement, the Supreme Court's language is far broader than just
another Anglo-hating Quebec thing (see Privacy : a New Trojan
Horse? (1998) by Marie-Philippe Bouchard, Senior Legal Counsel for the CBC,
along with Eric Swetsky's article in Marketing Magazine,
Aug 1998).
For
a brief summary of Canadian photographer's rights, see the overview put together by Ambient
Light.
USA
Attorney
Bert P. Krages II is the man to consult
here. Both his PDF summary The
Photographer's Right (2003), along with his book The Legal Handbook for Photographers
(2002), cover every possible aspect of photographer's rights in the USA. A
slightly more recent (Dec 2005) Legal
Rights of Photographers summary is also available by USAToday.com columnist Andrew Kantor.
Ditto the National Press Photographers Association Memo on
Photographer's Rights in Public Places (summary and PDF download, Aug
2005).
For
a more whimsical overview, see this Land of the Free
column by Mike Johnston. If you are specifically interested in how to respond
to Police questions when taking photos in public, see the Should Photography be
Illegal article by Jim McGee. Want to know about state-by-state Privacy
Invasion standards? — see the Photographer's Guide to
Privacy by The Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press. Finally, for up-to-date news and discussion on USA
photo rights, see <photopermit.org>.
In
July 2005 photo-consent became a hot issue in the USA, when Philip-Lorca diCorcia was sued
for $1.6 million by Erno Nussenzweig, for taking his portrait without
permission in Times Square in 2001. As you can imagine this caused
a lot hand-wringing by photographers worldwide. Luckily in February 2006 Nussenzweig lost.
England
For
a detailed two-page summary of the law as it applies to photographers in the
UK, download a copy of the UK
Photographers Rights PDF (2009) by Linda Macpherson. Although Brits have
historically tended to be lax on photo-privacy, things tightened after the murder of Lady
Diana Spencer in Paris in 1997. The Data Protection Act 1998 and Human
Rights Act 1998 both
feature language broad enough to include restrictions on all non-consensual
photography — editorial or candid! See the discussion in the Redeye
National Symposium 2004 Report, as well as the impact of the Douglas v.
Hello! (2003) and Naomi Campbell (2003) cases, analysed on the Act Now UK website. Presumably
it was the trend in these cases which tipped the appeal judges in favour of banning photos of J.K. Rowling's two-year old
son in May 2008. Similarly the infamous Section
44 of the UK Terrorism Act 2000 has also been (over)used by photo
hating zealots — for more information see the London Metropolitan
Police photography page.
France
With
the passage of the Presumption of Innocence and Rights of Victims
legislation in 2001, the publication of any photograph of a person without
their express consent is prohibited in
France. This applies to all photography, and is irrespective of
editorial or artistic or personal or advertising use. There is anecdotal
evidence that things are even more restrictive in practice, with some members
of the public and Police occasionally trying to prohibit people from merely taking
photographs, which in fact the PIRV law does not ban — only their publication!
For more information see: Droit en photographie
(French); Paris Sites in Pictures; Time Magazine Europe: June 26, 2000; France bans citizen journalists from reporting
violence by Peter Sayer, and Tom Stoddart's Out Of Love in Black
& White Photography Magazine (UK), Issue 3 Aug/Sep 2001 at pp.24-28.
Needless
to say, were Kertész or HCB working in
France today, then not only would they be harassed on a daily basis, but their
photographs could be censored and even banned from publication in that country.
Ah yes, but what about Luc
Delahaye's L'autre ?… Actually his Paris metro hidden-camera photos
were taken in 1995-7 and published in 1999 — a couple of years before
the 2001 PoIaRoV law.
Kuwait
Why
be halfhearted about this?…
It
was reported in November 2010 that the Kuwaiti Ministries of Information,
Social Affairs and Finance in had simply banned
all public photography, by anyone for any reason, unless they were an
accredited journalist.
A
week later the report was retracted (see link above). I guess someone in
government tested the waters and found them surprisingly cold. It is also
interesting that a journalist thought such a ban legitimate enough to write +
edit + publish a story about it, and then keep it alive for a week before
retraction…
- Travel-photographers should remember that some foreign cultures can be amazingly hostile towards photography. For example these unlicensed street vendors in Moscow in 1991…
Epilogue
What
about other Australian States?
Does
the information on this page apply to other states, say Queensland or Victoria?
In
a nutshell, yes, most of it does. Federal law applies to all of Australia, so
sections dealing with Privacy Law and Torts; Trade Practice issues; Copyright;
Defamation; Private Land rights etc. apply as much in Toorak, Brisvegas
or Geraldton, as it does in
Sydney.
Only
areas dealing with distinctly New South Wales issues, such as NSW legislation
or attempts by NSW councils to ban photography, are (obviously) NSW specific.
If
you only wish to know the law which applies in your state, please do not send
me a note. See the Commonwealth
or State links
on the Australian Privacy Foundation website, or else study the relevant
parts of the 60-page 2005 Cth A-G discussion paper (see links below).
NSW
Photo Rights Summary Sheet
In
collaboration with fellow Australian Photographer Kolya Miller,
we have created a two-page summary of the main issues in this article — for you
to download, print, and take with you when out on a shoot. It is written from a
photo-subject's perspective, and may prove useful when dealing with
rent-a-cops, supermarket managers or hostile bystanders.
NSW
Photo Rights Summary PDF file (87k bytes)
[ N.B.
This is a two-page document. If you have trouble viewing it, either right-click
to Save Link As…, or else download the following ZIP compressed version: NSW
Photo Rights Summary ZIP file (82k bytes) ]
2006-8
ALRC "Protecting privacy in a wired world" Inquiry
In
January 2006 the Commonwealth Attorney-General announced a broad-ranging review
of the Privacy Act 1988, to be conducted by the Australian Law Reform
Commission:
In
August 2008 they published their privacy magnum opus: ALRC
Report 108 — For Your Information: Australian Privacy Law and Practice.
They have also produced a single-page media
summary. Now it is a matter of wading through the three volume, 2700 page
document and seeing what parts of it, if any, the Commonwealth government will
(ever) adopt.
N.B.
A year later the NSWLRC published a similar report, Report
120 (2009) — Invasion of Privacy. Similar to ALRC 108 it recommends
statutory protection of privacy. Again it remains to be seen if any of the NSW
report will ever be implemented.
2005
Commonwealth Attorney-General discussion paper
In
the meantime, if you wish to read more about Australian photography rights,
then download a copy of the…
Unauthorised Photographs on the Internet and
Ancillary Privacy Issues
Discussion Paper — Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Aug 2005
(PDF 300k bytes)
Discussion Paper — Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Aug 2005
(PDF 300k bytes)
( Original link at ag.gov.au )
The
60-page paper features the most spectacularly detailed analysis of Australian
case law and legislation with respect to photography, consent, privacy and the
internet. Mind you, responses to the A-G's paper closed in October 2005, so it
is starting to get a bit old.
FWIW
the discussion paper led to a few interesting responses:
- Electronic Frontiers Australia
- NSW Commission for Children and Young People
- Australian Press Council
- The RiotACT Blog
…
but it appears the only legislative outcome was to prompt the A-G into
conducting yet another review of the Privacy Act in 2006 (see above).
2007
Rights of Photographer's Petition
In
March 2007 a petition
was started to advocate for and preserve the rights of Australian
photographers to take photos in public places. As you can imagine, over time it
has attracted a fair bit of flakiness and heat. See for example this discussion thread on the Digital Photography
Review Forum (!)
Further
Reading
- Arts Law Centre of Australia: Street Photographer's Rights (2010)
- Arts Law Centre of Australia: Photography Information Sheets Index (2010)
- David Petranker: Street Photographer's Rights (Australia Only) (2009)
- OCAU Wiki: Photographers Rights, General Privacy, and Copyright in Australia (2010)
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