every right.. private property organised event.. and if you read the thread properly you would know I wouldnt enforce it.. I take pictures not enforce rules.. I have never and would never tell a photographer they can or cant take pictures...
er...so if you're NOT going to tell the other photographers not to take photos or market them and aren't prepared to defend what you percieve as your fiefdom, why bother getting upset about it...?
I couldn't care less personally as I don't go to 'events' to take photos, but it seems to be a huge issue with some of you...
It's like the debate that continually rages about 'amateur' wedding Photographers and people giving free images to newspapers...
I find it all a bit bewildering...
If you've found a nich market, you should strive to be the best you can be; only by doing that can you protect your interests - not by claiming exclusive rights at venues that are impossible to police - if you find that someone is undercutting you, either get better at your job so that the customers keep coming to you, reduce your rates or go elsewhere...
Say I find an 'event' that interested me (like Mountain-Biking used to). Do I worry that there are several established Pros already covering the scene who appear to have the market locked-in as far as the MTB press is concerned?
Am I going to be put off by them giving me grief when I appear at all the races?
Am I going to stop sending picture editors thumbnails of my images in an attempt to break-in?
Just because they tell me they're the 'official Photographers and to b****r off'...?
No I am not...
No: I hammered the magazines after every race I could attend and although it took a whole season (mostly because my early efforts were rubbish/barely adequate compared to the guys that had been covering the races for years), I started getting stuff published...
The next season I was getting stuff published fairly regularly.
No-one's going to
give you an opportunity in this game - you have to take it - and if that means one of you gets left in the gutter, so be it - my priority is putting bread on
my table, not on yours.