
Dishwasher????? have you lost the use of your hands?
You are correct that there is no specific legal change to laws restricting photography &c. that's why I'm slightly perplexed as to your reference to "terrorism, Paedophile and PACE....." lawsadmin wrote: There is, AFAIK, no shift in law to sustain this - though terrorism, paedophile, pace laws and the Met's own advertising has not been kind to public photographers.
http://thomashawk.com/2009/01/mp-stoppe ... on-of.htmlbensonby wrote:... I'm slightly perplexed as to your reference to "terrorism, Paedophile and PACE....." laws
The Terrorism Act doesn't restrict photography in any way...(unless you think that rather nebulous and ill-phrased ammendment does - which is doesn't)
http://www.boingboing.net/2008/07/25/el ... rohib.htmlbensonby wrote:Paedophillia Laws (Sex Offences Act 2003) only make it illegal (amongst other things) to photograph child abuse....
The above are not exceptional. I myself was stopped from photographing Kirkdale by a PC quoting PACE because an accident had occurred there earlier - even though all vehicles and people had long gone. OK he was wrong. However pointing that out is not a career enhancing move as other photographers have found:bensonby wrote:PACE is an old piece of law (1984) that does not mention photography or anything of that ilk. It merely regulates police procedure...
Whoever "stopped" you probably did not have the authority to do so. What part of PACE did he quote? Just because a police officer asks or even tells you to do something it doesn't necessarily mean that you have to.The above are not exceptional. I myself was stopped from photographing Kirkdale by a PC quoting PACE because an accident had occurred there earlier - even though all vehicles and people had long gone. OK he was wrong. However pointing that out is not a career enhancing move as other photographers have found:
http://www.1854.eu/2009/02/police_v_pho ... nt_ta.html
I'll repeat until I am blue in the face - you are generally free to take photographs wherever you like in a public place - the law has not changed in any respect. Some ill-informed plods may think they can stop you taking photographs - but a blue uniform doens't give you omnipotence or blanket arbitary authorityFreedom to photograph is not what it used to be. The question I ask is that to stop material harm or because some people don't like it. Is the latter sufficient?
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