Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Street Sweeping Shooting and Portrait Right in Civil Code

Street Sweeping Shooting and Portrait Right in Civil Code

Legal analysis: No organization or individual may use information technology to deface, deface or forge others' portrait rights. Without the consent of the portrait owner, the portrait of the portrait owner shall not be made, used or publicly portrayed, except as designated by law enforcement. Without the consent of the portrait owner, the owner of the portrait work shall not use or make public the portrait by means of disclosure, reproduction, publication, lease or exhibition. Whether for profit or not, you are not allowed to take pictures of strangers at will. Don't use other people's photos as expression packs, don't cut videos of ghosts and animals, and don't change faces with AI.

Legal basis: Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC).

Article 1018 A natural person enjoys the right to portrait, and has the right to make, use, make public or permit others to use his own portrait according to law. Portrait is the external image of a specific natural person that can be recognized on a certain carrier through images, sculptures, paintings, etc.

Article 109 No organization or individual may use information technology to defame, damage or forge others' portrait rights. No portrait shall be made, used or made public without the consent of the owner of the portrait, except as otherwise provided by law. Without the consent of the portrait owner, the portrait owner shall not use or disclose the portrait of the portrait owner by publishing, copying, distributing, renting or exhibiting.

Article 1020 The following acts may be carried out reasonably without the consent of the portrait owner: (1) Using the portrait published by the portrait owner within the necessary scope for the needs of personal study, art appreciation, classroom teaching or scientific research; (2) Inevitably making, using and publicizing the portrait of the portrait holder for the purpose of news reporting; (three) the state organs to perform their duties according to law, within the necessary scope to make, use and publicize the portrait of the obligee; (4) Inevitably making, using and publicizing the portrait of the portrait holder in order to show the specific public environment; (5) Other acts of making, using or publicizing portraits in order to safeguard public interests or the legitimate rights and interests of portrait owners.