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August 14, 2006

The IHT reports on the press' growing dependence on citizen reporters and how some celebrities are fighting back - citing human rights violations.

German Tabloid "Bild's "Leser-Reporter" feature, introduced during the World Cup, brought its readership daily shots of celebrities, politicians and soccer stars - taken from the cellphone cameras of quick-thinking passers-by.

The paper paid €500 to €1,000, or $638 to $1,270, for photos printed in the Reader-Reporter pages, and by the end of the World Cup soccer tournament, as many as 1,000 photos were streaming in daily.

... "The restriction in the private lives of celebrities is already at the point where you can talk about a human rights violation," said Christian Schertz, a lawyer to the stars.

... Lawyers like Schertz have the legal backing of the European Court of Human Rights in their quest to preserve the private lives of their clients.


Originally from Smart Mobs, remediated by yatta on Aug 14, 2006 at 11:40 AM