Even in a private environment you need to have people sign a form agreeing to be filmed. In the case of the yoga classes we had all participants sign the  document before the class... except one student who arrived late and at the end said she was upset by the filming and did not agree to be part of the film.... Since she was in the middle of the group... one hour of shooting lost :-(
 
Christian

 
On 8/11/05, Pete Prodoehl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Jack Nelson wrote:
> --- In [email protected], "chrbaudry" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>Yesterday I brought my Canon Elura video camera which is a small
>>hand camera just fine to shoot video that will be streamed
>>
>>Guess what? No one cared about me! Teachers had other priorities, I
>>was basically ignored and wasted one hour!
>

> Yeah, having a big pro-like camera can work against you in certain situations too. It's
> pretty easy to get footage on the subway for instance if you have a small non-pro looking
> camera. But whip out that big shoulder DVC60 and you'll be asked pretty soon where your
> permit is.

Permit for what? Do you need a permit to shoot video on the subway or
other locations? (I'm asking because I really don't know. Are the
videographers rights the same as the well known photographers rights?)

Pete

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