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October 26, 2005

Some of you may have heard of the Photogapher's Right, a guide to your right as a photographer in public places by attorney Bert P. Krages II.

Well, videoblogger Pete Prodoehl, in a post on the videobloggers mailing list titled Are We The Media?, relates this episode today:

Yesterday I was shooting some video and walked into a university. I was told by an employee "I don't mean to ruin your fun, but you can't film in here." (She may have said 'videotape' instead of film, I'm not 100% sure, I just remember I was told I had to stop shooting.)

I noticed later that the fine folks from the local TV station were allowed to shoot inside, where I was not allowed to.

So, that brings up some questions in my mind.

Were the media given 'special priviledges' ordinary people are not?

Could the fact that it was a university have been in my favor? Don't my taxes help pay for it?

Is there "Videographer's Rights" document, like the Photographer's rights? Would it apply?

I was following what became a news event -- this is backed up by the fact that the local TV folks were there. I can't help but feel like I'm the little guy who got squashed by Big Media.

imate question. In my view, citizen journalists should have the same rights of access afforded news crews from the mainstream media.
Originally posted by JD Lasica from New Media Musings, remediated by yatta on Oct 26, 2005 at 07:28 PM