On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 12:03:05AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: > > I'd love to hear from people like Micah who did check the box and > > who were frustrated this year if they think such a solution would > > work well.
> I am in the same position as Micah, especially since I've been > raising this issue for many years, and since I generally don't want > my photos released in public space. > Differently coloured lanyards would work under three conditions: > 1. people actually respect them, > 2. we find 95%-proof means to blur people with those lanyards, and > 3. those people always wear those lanyards when cameras are > around. > But I think that all three of those fail: > 1. In the heat of the moment, you might not see the lanyard; > 2. Having done picture analysis for many years, this is neigh > impossible. It could be done by a human. Are we ready to expect > this from everyone, at the risk of demotivating e.g. Aigars? > 3. I do take my lanyard off occasionally, e.g. when playing > Frisbee, or at the pub. What now? Any solution that you come up with is going to be at the discretion of the photographers to conform to, because the law is not on the side of the photograph's subject where public spaces are concerned. So the only question is whether we think that there's a reasonably-complete solution that's worth implementing. As someone who doesn't personally share these concerns (there are already plenty of bad photos of me on the Internet, what's a few more?), I don't think my own opinion here matters much wrt "worth implementing". I can only apologize as an organizer for not doing a better job of raising the visibility of people's no-photo preference in a way that would matter. I do agree that we should *either* stop asking this question, *or* make use of it in some meaningful way. Perhaps the sensible thing to do here for now is to hide the field in summit, and if someone does come up with a plan for using it in the future, we can reverse that. -- Steve Langasek Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS Debian Developer to set it on, and I can move the world. Ubuntu Developer http://www.debian.org/ slanga...@ubuntu.com vor...@debian.org
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