Yesterday I had a conversation with the orga of an upcoming hacker event about their code of conduct. I was asking for a small but important addition which I sadly think needs to be in the code of conduct for all hacker events.
I believe this to the extent that after 2024 I will no longer write about or cover events that do not have it.
Stick around, if you deal with hacker events you'll want to read this.
1/n
It's normal at hacker events for there to be a photography policy. Usually one in which photography of identifiable people without consent is prohibited. This is a reasonable thing to have for many reasons.
I have never seen an event that prohibits cameras, or one that prohibits photography of things. I am there with a camera because I photograph things. You see them on Hackaday, and I hope you appreciate them.
Unfortunately, there seems to be a growing section of our community that has taken the prohibition of photography of identifiable people without consent, and turned it into a belief that cameras and photography are banned.
This has grown over the years, and has started to manifest itself in harassment of people with cameras.
It never used to be a problem, but over the last few years I have found that I am routinely harassed by people because I am carrying a camera. At one camp this became threatening. I was using a tripod after dark to take unfocused pictures of the lights and someone took exception to this. I should not have to resort to my physical size to get someone to back off, after all most women at hacker camps don't have what I have.
So the thing I asked for in the code of conduct was simple. A specific clause banning harassment of or violence towards photographers. And in this I don't accept the "It's already covered by our be excellent to each other clause", because that plainly isn't working.
It shouldn't be a controversial thing to ask for, if you are someone who thinks it is then perhaps you should take a look in the mirror and ask what you have become.
@JennyList humanity-hack: get a hi-viz vest with "event photographer" printed on the back.
very few people question it, and it makes you slightly less likely to get trodden on while low-lighting.
in case of queries, it was left over from a previous event* and seemed like a good idea so people don't bump into you while snapping
*the event in question was purchasing said hi-viz, but shhhh ;)
if that doesn't work, I break out the verbose conversation about defocus, aperture, bokeh etc.
@evilstevie that's a good one.