
Originally Posted by
Wayne
Careful Sextus, you're sounding awfully like you expect a bit of commonsense to prevail.
The Sydney Harbour Rangers and the attempts to control use of all foreshore images is absurd, but does highlight the inadequacy of copyright laws; which are so clearly outdated, outmoded and useless. I believe the copyright law that those rangers are applying (and on which all the big music and film corporations rely) were over devised 150 yeas ago.
And I think that is why this issue of seeking permission to use an image is so fraught. There are several aspects to this. One is that any reasonable person can say that the image is widely available (of the music rift, of the idea) but then some corporation comes along, places a commercial value of it and brandish a team of expensive lawyers. I'm thinking about the Men at Work song, but it can equally apply to a photo of the Opera House, of some other silly thing.
Another aspect, which is more pertinent to the title of this thread, is that a reasonable person might say an image is harmless; while another can say it invades privacy or exploits another. That bloke I mentioned at Coogee fell foul of the law because of this. He is a bit of an idiot who feels the world doesn't understand his brilliance, so he wanted to make the definitive documentary about Sydney. He is full of himself and I can well imagine him rubbing the cops up the wrong way. I suspect that's why he got himself arrested then charged.
The other side of the issue is public safety. This is the rationale the UK government has been using for their installation of cameras everywhere. It's also the reason brothels have surveillance cameras. The camera owners argue that they are ensuring public safety. But then who owns the images and what responsibility does the owner have toward the subjects of the images? If those arcane copyright laws are applied then the government/brothel owner can do what they like. Commonsense says that such images won't be published. But is commonsense always applied? And then there all those ex-girlfriend and such like shame websites. Whose stopping some aggrieved wife setting up a website with recordings from men entering brothels?
Commonsense again says any clandestine recordings can not be published. But then again, where is the commonsense once a recording is in the public domain?
Copyright laws were developed to protect the interests of a few rich people before the notion of cameras, let alone computers, were even dreamt of. Until those laws are brought into line with technology then there will always be someone or some corporation that can come down on you with a ton of bricks. So ends my rant for the day.