Basically, what you post on the internet is a First Amendment Issue! {when someone tells you what you can or cannot do...tell em to look at these 3 links! #1 http://www.barkingdogs.org/ \ {this site changed "lower greenville" in Dallas forever...} #2 http://vimeo.com/1902704 {caution..partial nudity...} #3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43icGzga7Pg&feature=channel_page Video Basically, Also, shooting video in public government meetings is legal. If they ban you, they must ban all cameras, which is not legal. DOCUMENTS
See...it's real simple..or maybe the ones that don't understand this need to check out the {if they catch you on the beach or your backyard naked, looki'n bad or just plain anything ...you gonna be famous!} What you can't do is LIE! heres some more info: Other sites have also received complaints asking that posts be removed. Most say they will remove identifying information like phone numbers or full names when it comes to their attention or if asked. Yet lawyers say alleged wrongdoers shamed online typically have little legal recourse under libel and privacy laws if the accusations in postings are true, if they are posters' opinions about behavior witnessed in a public place and if the personal information listed is available to the public. "It becomes very difficult when it comes to the shaming sites in terms of what you can do in creating a case," says Daniel Solove, an associate professor of law at George Washington University Law School, who is working on a book about gossiping, shaming and privacy on the Internet. Caughtya.org hosts pictures of cars illegally parked in handicapped spaces. (Other objects qualify, too; one photo from Plano, Texas, is called "Big Rubber Chicken parked in accessible parking spaces.") Playground snoops can log onto the five-month-old Isaw-yournanny.blogspot.com, where users have posted details about nannies committing misdeeds, like feeding children Ho Hos. |