Hi,

[...]
> My guess is that this ruling will serve as a handle to prevent
> stalking excesses (whether it involves celebs, children, former lovers,
> whatever; any case were some maniac decides to follow you around with a
> camera all day every day) more than some Draconian measure to ban people
> from taking each other's photographs. I guess we'll have to see how 
> jurisprudence develops.

It occurred to me this morning that the law is (or may be - I only
know what I've read in the paper) double-plus stupid.

According to the article it becomes illegal to publish the photograph
without the subject's (or indeed subjects' - there may be other people
in the picture) consent.

There is a presumption of innocence, so in any court case the
publisher does not have to prove that they _have_ consent. Rather the
plaintiff has to prove that the publisher does _not_ have consent.

This means they have to prove a negative.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob

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