profchris
Established Member
DiscoStu":kioxuj69 said:You do not have the right to take photos inside any private property. You must seek permission. In addition you need to be careful what you are doing with the photos if you are there in a professional capacity then the chances are you’ll come under commercial law and that is very different to the law applied to someone taking photos in a stately home for example.
There May be very good reasons why people don’t want their homes photographed. For example when you take a photo on a phone it records the GPS data for where that photo was taken. If I happen to have an expensive antique painting on the wall worth £30k I might not want that photo appearing when someone does an image search and showing exactly where it is. There are also often good reasons around children and protection of them. You should always get permission.
I would suggest you have T’s and Cs that state you take photos to evidence your work and how you leave the work and rooms. These photos are never published without the owners permission. Then get permission if you want to use the photos on your website etc.
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As a statement of law this is incorrect.
You have no right to take the photos, but the property owner has no right to object (with some exceptions, such as you agreed not to take photos as a condition of access). Commercial photographing is no different (unless you're photographing copyright works).
Where the property owner might have legal rights is where you share the photos with someone else. The main risks here are disclosing personal data or confidential information. A possible claim is infringing their privacy, but the law here is just being developed so this is low risk unless your client is a public figure. Even so, a picture of the shelves you just built is hardly a privacy problem!
What is ethical or polite is a different matter, but law is not based on either (though it sometimes reflects them).
The practical solution is to say in your estimate that you take photos of your work and explain if you use them for promotion purposes. This lets the client object before engaging you, and of course an unreasoning objection might tell you if you want the work