The photos that Scuzi refers to were taken with a zoom lens though and the one of the little girl on her own is pretty much full frame. It's not even fully in focus because I'd imagine that the photographer did a quick candid shot rather than compose the picture correctly so he obviously knew that the subject was taboo.
If I thought it was taboo I never would have posted them, it wasn't a perfect photo because I was in a hurry to get what I felt was a good photo before the moment passed - so many excellent photos pass us by every minute and if you don't try to capture them then you do yourself a great disservice. None of the photos depicted anything indecent, or taboo, and I had absolutely no qualms about taking them other than that an uninformed PCSO would come and steal my camera just because I had one (they seem to be doing that a lot). Don't make assumptions about other peoples feelings.
My opinion on candids of children are that the public have been terrorised by the medias sensationalisation of paedophile rings and child abuse, so much that they believe even a decent photo of a child counts as abuse - the problem is that the stories being reported involve children actually being abused, and photos
of people abusing children, which is a million miles and a half away from a decent candid photo of a clothed child enjoying a day in the park.
The innocent parents and bystanders have been mislead into believing that our children are unsafe in public, when they are at no greater risk than the parents themselves - no harm is done to someone by taking a photo of them, be they adult or child,
unless they are being physically abused at the time - unfortunately due to constant media scaremongering that little detail has been trampled in favour of over-protectiveness and the innocent photographer has suffered.
When I took the photos that set off this debate on the other forum I was clearly within a public place, only a short distance from each subject, in plain sight of parents, children and others, and more than one person saw me taking the photos (as should be expected, I cannot turn invisible) and since I was with two other photographers, my best mate and my girlfriend, all of us with DSLRs we were certainly noticable, there can definiely not be any allusion that we were in any way covert. We had visited the park with the intent of photoghaphing the park itself, and while we were there several opportunities presented themselves for candid photos, with subjects ranging from toddlers to teenagers, adults and the elderly.
Most of the people who noted me taking photos of them made no reaction at all and continued what they were doing, quite clearly unconcerned. There were some reactions from adults, who smiled, nodded and even waved happily! One young mother smiled at me as I took a photo of her and her toddler feeding the birds. I smiled back and they continued feeding and I continued shooting. I was very comfortable taking these photos and the subjects were clearly comfortable as well.
I think a lot of wrong assumptions have been made in these discussions (by over-worrying minds), I hope this clears some of them up.
On my next round I have ordered business cards, and will be handing them to subjects
after the shots so that they can see them. Not as any kind of permission request, but because I am proud of my work and want to share it with those who help make it happen.