This is good, thank you. I’m honestly surprised Australia is so open, but not completely.
I understand that this has been a recent topic in the EU but I’d really like to see information on government positions on this in more areas of the world.
I took a huge cut in pay fifteen years ago to take a job serving the under-resourced. I’m still doing it and our family makes sacrifices for it every year. I’d still help ex-Google employees haha.
O no! Usually I have compassion for people or families losing employment/income but this headline feels more along the lines of The empire lays off 1,000 Stormtroopers
Free speech doesn’t mean a compelled audience.
I’ve felt that way for a long time. It’s nice to see someone else say it.
Thank you for the clarification, I humbly accept the correction. I guess I understand why it was written into law to force all schools to comply but when it is only enforceable upon school staff it still feels like a policy because it doesn’t affect the general public. But you are 100% correct.
You’re misunderstanding policies vs laws. Their employees have to follow their policies to keep their jobs. There is no law preventing taking and sharing images taken in public places.
In the US they do. Schools may have policies respecting privacy but the current case law around the First Amendment supercedes any laws against publishing photos or videos taken in public online. I know OP is in Italy tho.
That’s when I played too. Following the rules was torture.