Commons:Country specific consent requirements/table

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page is a translated version of a page Commons:Country specific consent requirements/table and the translation is 100% complete. Changes to the translation template, respectively the source language can be submitted through Commons:Country specific consent requirements/table and have to be approved by a translation administrator.

Multiple pages are involved in producing the table of country specific requirements.

The table itself

Autorisation nécessaire pour une photographie d'une personne dans un lieu public (par pays)
Pays / Territoire Prendre une photo Publier 1 photo Utiliser une photo publiée à titre commercial2
Afghanistan No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Argentine No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Australie No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) Yes
Autriche No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) Yes
Belgique No Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Brésil Yes Yes Yes
Bulgarie No No Yes
Canada Depends on province Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Chine, République Populaire de No No Yes
Taiwan No No (with exceptions) Yes
République tchèque Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Danemark No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Éthiopie No Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Finlande No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
France Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)[1] Yes
Allemagne No (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Grèce No No Yes (with exceptions)
Hong Kong Depends on circumstances Depends on circumstances Depends on circumstances
Hongrie Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Islande No No (with exceptions) Yes
Inde No No (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Indonésie Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Iran No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions)
Irlande No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions)
Israël No No (with exceptions) Yes
Italie No Yes (with exceptions)[2][3][4] Yes[5]
Japon Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Libye No Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Macau Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Mexique No Yes Yes
Pays-Bas No No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions)
Nouvelle-Zélande No No Yes
Norvège No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Pérou No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Pologne No Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Portugal No (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes
Roumanie No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Fédération russe No Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Singapour No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions)
Slovaquie Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Slovénie No No Yes
Afrique du Sud No No Yes
Corée du Sud Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Espagne Yes Yes Yes
Suède No No Yes
Suisse Yes Yes Yes
Turquie Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions) Yes (with exceptions)
Royaume-Uni No (with exceptions) No (with exceptions) Yes
États-Unis No No Usually (although laws differ by state)
1 : dans ce contexte d'exigences en matière d'autorisation, "publier" fait référence au fait de "rendre public" et est à distinguer du terme "publier" tel que défini ailleurs (p.e. la loi sur le droit d'auteur des Etats-Unis/du Royaume-Uni).

2 : dans ce contexte d'exigences en matière d'autorisation, l'"usage commercial" est à distinguer de, et ne fait pas référence à, des conditions de placement sous une licence qui interdirait l'usage commercial (licences non-commerciales). Souvent, la notion d'utilisation commerciale, dans ce contexte, est distincte de l'"utilisation éditoriale", qui se référait à des objectifs de publicité et de marketing, alors que cette dernière fait référence à la diffusion de nouvelles et à l'éducation, même lorsqu'il y a un objectif lucratif.

  1. Laurent, Olivier (23 April 2013). "Protecting the Right to Photograph, or Not to Be Photographed". The New York Times. Retrieved on 15 February 2015.
  2. Italy, Street-Photography and the Law (29 October 2013). Archived from the original on April 13, 2016. Retrieved on 15 February 2015.
  3. Monti, Andrea. Italian Law & Street Photography / What are you allowed to shoot?. Archived from the original on March 17, 2017. Retrieved on 15 February 2015.
  4. Art. 97. Legge 22 aprile 1941 n. 633 - Protezione del diritto d'autore e di altri diritti connessi al suo esercizio (G.U. n.166 del 16 luglio 1941) / Testo consolidato al 6 febbraio 2016 (DLgs 15 gennaio 2016, n. 8). Retrieved on 2020-05-05.
  5. Art. 96. Legge 22 aprile 1941 n. 633 - Protezione del diritto d'autore e di altri diritti connessi al suo esercizio (G.U. n.166 del 16 luglio 1941) / Testo consolidato al 6 febbraio 2016 (DLgs 15 gennaio 2016, n. 8). Retrieved on 2020-05-05.