Flipper
New member
Going back to your last post...
You stated that: "However, the people in a photograph have the right to control what happens with their own image..."
From where do they derive this right? Are you anti-security camera? After all, they are constantly recording us without our consent.
Even if they did have that right, they are still acting as censors. I don't think motive is an issue in the act of censorship. They are acting as their own censors to prevent harm to themselves. A government censor may believe he or she is acting to prevent harm to society.
It is still censorship. To impose your opinion on whether and how a picture or image is used is censorship, no matter how laudable.
Is it censorship to prevent someone from having sex with a goat in a public place? What if they say it's art? Isn't that censorship? Do you support their right to do and say as they like in that public place, no matter how upsetting it may be?
What if someone decided that their form of self-expression was to stand outside a synagogue and loudly read passages from Mein Kampf using a bullhorn? What if they claimed it was a performance piece? Would you prevent them from doing so?
You stated that: "However, the people in a photograph have the right to control what happens with their own image..."
From where do they derive this right? Are you anti-security camera? After all, they are constantly recording us without our consent.
Even if they did have that right, they are still acting as censors. I don't think motive is an issue in the act of censorship. They are acting as their own censors to prevent harm to themselves. A government censor may believe he or she is acting to prevent harm to society.
It is still censorship. To impose your opinion on whether and how a picture or image is used is censorship, no matter how laudable.
Is it censorship to prevent someone from having sex with a goat in a public place? What if they say it's art? Isn't that censorship? Do you support their right to do and say as they like in that public place, no matter how upsetting it may be?
What if someone decided that their form of self-expression was to stand outside a synagogue and loudly read passages from Mein Kampf using a bullhorn? What if they claimed it was a performance piece? Would you prevent them from doing so?