Surreptitious Photography…
(continued from Warren and Brandeis)
“… While, for instance, the state of the photographic art was such that one’s picture could seldom be taken without his consciously ‘sitting’ for the purpose, the law of contract or of trust might afford the prudent man sufficient safeguards against the improper circulation of his portrait; but since the latest advances in photographic art have rendered it possible to take pictures surreptitiously, the doctrines of contract and of trust are inadequate to support the required protection.”