blog.bouah.net/content/posts/no-pictures.md
Maxime “pep” Buquet fb97ccb545
New draft: no-pictures
Signed-off-by: Maxime “pep” Buquet <pep@bouah.net>
2022-03-20 02:10:14 +01:00

2.3 KiB

title date draft
Am I allowed to say no? 2020-07-06T21:34:42+02:00 true

People often take photographs for granted. It does seem obvious in our society that one likes to appear with their friend on Facebook, TikTok, what have you.

Early on I started telling people I didn't want to have my picture taken. It has never really been clear why, and to me either to be honest. It might have been out of shyness -- trait that is still ever so present -- or because I didn't like the looks of me on them, or any other reason. But I kept to it.

Growing up I started fiercely advocating for privacy and so this obviously made up to the list of reasons. How would I know what people having access to this picture would do with the information that I was at a specific place at a specific moment, or simply with my image. And I kept telling people not to take pictures of me.

And despite saying all that, people kept teasing me about it, while some would plainly ignore my requests and take pictures anyway.

When somebody insists, or asks why -- not that I mind having this discussion when they're not pointing a camera to my face -- all I hear is society reminding me that not wanting to appear on pictures isn't "normal".

I can try to explain and justify this all I want, but the real issue here isn't that I am saying no, it's that nobody hears that I am saying no. What we really should be asking is why am I compelled to justify this behaviour for others to accept it, and not for others to respect me saying "no".

Consent, to name it, is to ask for a "yes", and not to assume.

Note that I am specifically talking about photographs here, which is an issue I've had. I am sure non-valid/white/cis/males have had many other consent-related issues, and I can only sympathize.