I was being a bit loose. You can video record people in public -- just not audio. Any audio on your video recording device makes it illegal.
There are 13 US states like this
Comment on Anonymity is dead and we’re all content now
DrBob@lemmy.ca 12 hours agoThat’s interesting. In North America this was largely litigated during the era of film photography and common law went in the other direction. You do not have control over being recorded or photographed in a situation where there is not have a reasonable expectation of privacy - at least for non-commercial purposes. Restaurants and walking around in public are classic examples of this.
I honestly wasn’t even aware of jurisdictions that had an opposite approach.
I was being a bit loose. You can video record people in public -- just not audio. Any audio on your video recording device makes it illegal.
There are 13 US states like this
ctrl_alt_esc@lemmy.ml 11 hours ago
It’s like this in pretty much all of continental Europe afaik. You have to accept being filmed in public simply due to the fact that you’re in public, for example, if a documentary about your city is being filmed and you walk into it, or the news, etc. However, it’s not allowed to film someone specifically or take their picture without their consent, as in the restaurant example in the OP.