UnSubRocky wrote on Sep 18
th, 2024 at 3:01pm:
tallowood wrote on Sep 18
th, 2024 at 12:08pm:
I think there were bans on taking photos in swimming pools and children sport events few years back. User Uncanny discussed them here if I remember right.
If the users are using the pool for anything other than waterworks, then there is no need for a ban on at least one camera in the pool area. Security just needs to be discrete about what footage to show the emergency services.
Pool admin needs cameras everywhere. I would say even in changing rooms. And sure there is concern about pool staff spying on (or distributing) changing room footage, but why not encrypt that so only the highest staff or the police can access it?
Men and women should feel safe in the changing rooms. They are not, in reality. Men can enter a women's changing room, and vice versa, plus of course women can commit offences against other women (in a changing room) and obviously vice versa.
Back in the mainstream, it should be possible for relatives of someone who drowned, to bring a case against pool staff. There should be video always, to establish whether that charge is sound or unsound.
Now we get to the difficult bit. Should swimmers be allowed to film other swimmers? I find it hard to deny a parent the right to film their child jumping into the water. Or completing their first lap. Adults filming their partner respelendent in a skimpy swim suit. Consent is given, or reasonably implied (parents always have the consent of their children.)
Seems to me a situation of "if you can't regulate it, you must ban it" and I think the opposite. You take your pretty girlfriend or your children to the pool, you necessarily consent to strangers taking photos or video of your precious one.
Perhaps we could have No Photo and Yes Photo pools?