Folks,

I'm behind on my list reading so I don't know whether this has 
already been discussed, but just in case it hasn't ... :

<http://newurbanist.blogspot.com/2005/01/copyrighting-of-public-space.html>

        "The Reader recounts the experience of photojournalist 
        Warren Wimmer's attempts to photograph Anish Kapoor's 
        sculpture, Cloud Gate (more commonly known as 'the Bean'). 
        When Wimmer set up his tripod and camera to shoot the 
        sculpture, security guards stopped him, demanding that 
        they show him a permit. Wimmer protested, replying that 
        it's absurd that one needs to pay for a permit to 
        photograph public art in a city-owned park."

The explanation (they're protecting the _artist's_ copyright) makes 
some sense to me as well, but the "guards will stop you if you try
to take photos in public" aspect still feels ... troublingly odd.


                                        -- Glenn

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