On 10 September 2014 00:22, Tollef Fog Heen <tfh...@err.no> wrote: > I think we do have technology to implement that. Maybe not with 100% > hit rate, but not that far off. Give people who don't want to be > photographed differently-coloured lanyards. It costs a bit more, since > we need two types of lanyards and in some cases it might not be > effective (if you're not wearing your tag at the C&W party, you might > get pictures taken of you), but I believe it would be a cheap, low-tech > and simple way to get us 90% of the way to where we want to be. > > I'd love to hear from people like Micah who did check the box and who > were frustrated this year if they think such a solution would work well.
I do not think that is a workable solution, unfortunately. If there are more than a couple people in a shot, checking badge or lanyard colors of everyone becomes so time consuming that at best it will multiply the work required to cover the conference tenfold (a ballpark estimation given the number of people in existing pictures) and it will likely mean that most capture-worthy moments of real, live human interaction will be missed due to timing thus severely reducing the value of the few photos that will be taken. It would take something pretty extreme visually to be visible at a glance even in a larger group of people wearing colorful t-shirts, like a red fedora, but then I bet people will have a strong temptation to photograph weird people wearing red fedoras. And if there are too few photos, then we can be quite sure that participants will feel the need to take even more pictures themselves and will be much more likely to simply ignore these rules producing an even worse result from privacy perspective in the end. For example, I see much more photos of hacklabs (the most private spaces of a Debconf IMHO) from DC12 then from DC14. Or we can just happen to get almost no photos - it took me some time to find any photographic evidence that DC13 even happened. I want to find a compromise between privacy and workability and that is the reason why I started this thread now - so we can try to come up with an acceptable solution for next year without undue rush, but still start it with memories of this year fresh in our minds. -- Best regards, Aigars Mahinovs mailto:aigar...@debian.org #--------------------------------------------------------------# | .''`. Debian GNU/Linux (http://www.debian.org) | | : :' : Latvian Open Source Assoc. (http://www.laka.lv) | | `. `' Linux Administration and Free Software Consulting | | `- (http://www.aiteki.com) | #--------------------------------------------------------------# _______________________________________________ Debconf-discuss mailing list Debconf-discuss@lists.debconf.org http://lists.debconf.org/mailman/listinfo/debconf-discuss