ChatterBank0 min ago
Breaking News, Duchess Of Cambridge Wins 100,000 Euros Damages Over Topless Photos.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If it is donated to charity we will never hear of it I suspect since the Royals tend to do this sort of thing discreetly.
Frankly good on her for bringing the gutter press to task. If someone published topless pics of me staying at a private villa where I could expect some privacy I'd be hopping mad (not that anyone is vaguely interested in my saggy offerings).
Frankly good on her for bringing the gutter press to task. If someone published topless pics of me staying at a private villa where I could expect some privacy I'd be hopping mad (not that anyone is vaguely interested in my saggy offerings).
BM - I'm not defending the vile paparazzi, but (since they were on a public road) I presume the offence was in the publishing of the pictures, rather than the taking of them?
Would it have been an offence to publish the pics if they were of Madame Anonyme rather than a Royal Personage? Would the damages have been as punitive?
[ and what the royals do with the damages is up to them and no-one else ]
Would it have been an offence to publish the pics if they were of Madame Anonyme rather than a Royal Personage? Would the damages have been as punitive?
[ and what the royals do with the damages is up to them and no-one else ]
Lol. Glad to see some have a sense of humour........ ;)
SD - I am not sure it was an offence per se but I am not sure how french privacy laws work.
However, my view is that if a photographer took a picture of anyone enjoying private time in a private villa and then published them this is, in anyone's view, an invasion of privacy. I suspect the roots of this case are found in the ECHR which upholds the right to privacy.
SD - I am not sure it was an offence per se but I am not sure how french privacy laws work.
However, my view is that if a photographer took a picture of anyone enjoying private time in a private villa and then published them this is, in anyone's view, an invasion of privacy. I suspect the roots of this case are found in the ECHR which upholds the right to privacy.
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