1. You are beating a dead horse.
2. Although you may feel that they picked on you, or that they "criminalised" you, I assure you that is not the case. They simply thought you were going to take a picture, so they tried to pre-empt that. They have no formal photography training, they just see someone touching a big camera intently and so they came over.
I think generally they accept that people, esp. tourists, may sling their cameras as they shop, that's ok, but the moment they raise or attempt to raise the camera, if the guard sees it, and if he's on, he's supposed to act. Else he could kena fired.
3. Your unhappiness comes from the fact that they "accused" you of doing something you did not. I assure you they did not pick on you specifically, you just happened to catch their eye. They did not single you out.
They could have been more polite, but telling you not to take pictures is simply telling you dept store policy.
4. There are many other policies, eg. no bags. Security guards in years past would ask shoppers to deposit their bags at the holding area-- do you remember? Many times I've been asked to follow this policy-- it does not mean they are accusing me of shoplifting, it's just the house rules. If I felt that way each time, my blood pressure would have burst long ago. However, with improved security systems (eg. electronic tags) most stores no longer do this.
5. There is no trouble with the law per se, unless you want to escalate it. They would not sue you or ask to retain your film/CF card as it's a trival matter. But if you really refused to comply, they management could tell you to leave the store, and if you then refused, they could evict you physically or even call the police to arrest you for trespassing if you physically refused to leave.
6. I don't like such store policy either-- I think stores and supermarkets are stupid in this area-- but it's their private property, so they make their own rules.
7. Is it worth it?
Wai Leong
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radedward said:
I know this sounds like beating a dead horse but why is it necessary for me to keep my camera?
The sign/warning says 'no photography' not 'no camera'.
I really do want to know not because I being anal about it and no, I do not go out of my way to get into trouble with the law.
I'm bringing this up because I think it is unreasonable to assume someone has done something wrong (and I use the word 'wrong' here very loosely) without a reasonable excuse.
Holding a camera in my hand does not constitute a reasonable excuse to accuse me of taking photographs. It might give the person just cause to observe me whether I'm going to take a photograph but not to come up to me and accuse me of something I did not do.
I'm not a rabble rouser who wants to "stick it to The Man" as the expression goes but I draw the line at false accusations.