Sunday, November 9, 2014

Re: [digital-photography] Re: And yet another one

 

You live in China? That explains a lot.

Yes photographers have been arrested here, in the US for photography. Most of us hope for such great good luck. As soon as they leave the jailhouse they head straight to a lawyer and the results have varied between $50,000 and $250,000 judgements against the agency that arrested them. 


That one wasn't a building but there are plenty of other examples. You see we have something that most of the rest of the world doesn't: A Bill of Rights in the Constitution.

And by the way buildings cannot be copyrighted in the US and you can take photos as long as you are standing on public property. Exceptions are military bases and such.

BK


Principles and rules are intended to provide a thinking man with a frame of reference.
Carl von Clausewitz

J Bryan Krämer       North Florida, USA
photos at: http://pbase.com/photoburner
blog at: http://www.photoburner.net

On Sun, Nov 9, 2014 at 9:43 PM, Robin Gee robingee@yandex.com [digital-photography] <digital-photography@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


To return this to the subject of photography.

 

I think it is very important that everyone understands what is going on, so they can either implement some protection, or avoid the pitfalls. A EU photographer visited me once here in China, and he take photos of buildings with a wooden glass plate camera. He told me he had been arrested many times in EU for suspected terrorist preparations. Did you know that photographing buildings and bridges in EU can be a copyright violation? A tram enthusiast in Philadelphia was arrested and interrogated for hours after photographing a tram. Two Japanese photographing military installations and recording the GPS position in China was fined $3,000 and ordered out within 24 hours.

 

Did you know that there is a court decision in EU that it is a copy right offense to pass you legally bought e-book to someone else, selling or giving it away.

 

If you want to know what Kindle monitors, look at my previous post. That is what we know, what is it we don't know. You are watched, and if you don't like that they have access to your device to monitor and erase, tough, they decide, you just dance to their pipe, or stay away. All "locked" systems, as Apple, are well known to have access to your system.



On 09-Nov-2014 9:55 PM, weezyrider@yahoo.com [digital-photography] wrote:
 

I don't know what Kindle tracks, but I read the TOS for a Nook I bought and there were 2 affiliates you could NOT opt out of. You could opt out of B&N and one affiliate. Nook was unregistered. I'm still using it. It uses a micro SD card. There are independent ebook sellers. I like Sci Fi, Baen and Double Dragon sell decent stuff reasonably.

I also wouldn't want Nook or Kindle able to delete any book I bought in good faith. If either goofed, it's their problem. I would not make the book available illegally, though.





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