Legit-NotADev

joined 10 months ago
[–] Legit-NotADev@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Yeah I’ve hardly got a press card so I can’t use clothing that indicates as such, though I’m not sure what issue there would be with just plain high visibility clothing. The main thing I’d want to avoid is a situation when the police tries to stop movement into a certain area, which is particularly prevalent at counter protests where you need to keep two opposing sides separated, and I’d be identified as a protester instead of a disinterested observer.

For instance in the US you have ACLU legal observers, who are able to be identified easily as separate parties to protesters (at least I hope they act impartially)

[–] Legit-NotADev@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

I live in the UK so perhaps it’s different where you are, but generally this kind of stuff isn’t used at the types of events I’d be interested in so I’ll be fine for that. And yes in the UK filming laws are very liberal so there’s no legal problem here.

 

Photography has been my hobby for a while now, but I often just take pictures of trains and boring stuff like that, and something that I’ve always been fascinated by is photography at large public events, for example protests, demonstrations or ceremonies (the two most prominent examples I can think of in recent times are Israel-Palestine protests or Remembrance parades which happened recently), but I have no clue how to go about it. I would only want to do it for personal interest and not for commercial purposes (if the pictures were published they would be in the public domain).

My question is pretty much how I would go about doing this. Should I wear specific clothing so the police can identify me? Is there any other precautions I need to take? I have no clue.