Your Right$ vs. Their Right$ Right? – The Digital Journalist

While there is no question that the First Amendment protects coverage of spot-news events in public places, it is also clear that private events may be legally controlled by their organizers. Organizers may say who may or may not attend. They may also require that attendees agree to certain conditions. Journalists are equally free to [...]Published May 25, 2008

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Last updated Sun, 25 May 2008 14:28:15 +0000

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Photography introduced me to the 'new media' evolution. I currently do community management at Meraki in San Francisco, but this blog is about journalism, some UX design, and the occasional rant. more →

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While there is no question that the First Amendment protects coverage of spot-news events in public places, it is also clear that private events may be legally controlled by their organizers. Organizers may say who may or may not attend. They may also require that attendees agree to certain conditions.Journalists are equally free to decline to agree and simply stay away.

-Your Right$ Vs. Their Right$ Right? – The Digital Journalist

Good advice to photographers – beware what you agree you can(‘t) do with your images when shooting an event. The obvious problem for journalists is that standing on higher moral ground isn’t really an option. If you don’t shoot an event, someone else will, and they’ll have the published photos to prove it.

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