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I had an interesting conversation with a construction site manager yesterday. It was a nice, warm, sunny day, and I was wandering along Zhongxiao West Road after a pleasant lunch near Camera Street and then hanging around the North Gate watching a wedding photographer chase the retreating light around the square.
I walked east and got yelled at by a crazy Chinese monk for taking a photo of the Mitsukoshi Building. I am long exiled from Foshan! I kept walking, ending up on the famous pedestrian bridge at the intersection of Zhongxiao and Zhongshan. A busy construction site where the old round City Council building used to be caught my eye, and I took a few shots from the bridge before heading down to see if the light was nicer from street level.
It seems like a well-run site. This project has even been shown in the media before. That means curious tourists walking by. Photography is going to happen. He seemed amenable to this point of view, but he was still in manager mode. Is everyone afraid that their nefarious behavior will get them in trouble?
Then again, government and corporate surveillance is expressly put in place to catch wrongdoing, so is it that far a stretch to imagine that, as such recording becomes more ubiquitous and ever present, the general population just assumes that any kind of photography is accusatory and predatory in nature? People crave attention, but just the safe kind of attention, I suppose. Whatever that is. To wit: I recently got back in touch with a street photographer I used to chat with back in the early days of Flickr, Joe Wigfall.