VAOJ has reported on the problems with Google Street View and privacy issues in Japan. There are also problems in Germany as well as other European countries. From The Local - Germany's On-line News in English:
German consumer protection minister Ilse Aigner says that internet giant Google could face "more than 50,000" lawsuits in Germany because of its controversial virtual photo service Street View.
Seems as though Google was not only taking unwanted photos, but gathering people's private internet information as well. From CNN Money.com:
The company is facing criminal charges from Germany related to its Google map feature, Street View. Street View shows 360 degree images of locations all over the globe. To get these images, Google deploys vans, cars and kooky tricycles equipped with cameras and GPS receivers, to collect photos of as many places as possible. Turns out, besides taking snapshots of the local biergarden in Germany, Google's vehicles were also mapping and enumerating the locations of open Wi-Fi networks.
Read the entire articles:
Minister: Google faces 50,000 lawsuits
http://www.thelocal.de/national/20100530-27527.html
Google, feeling lucky, tells German privacy czar to wait
http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/27/news/companies/google_privacy_fortune.fortune/
I am looking forward to investigating privacy issues and public photography in Germany. What kinds of challenges will my new students have in shooting their ethnographic films here? Stay tuned...
Explorations and experiments in visual representations - multimodality, sensory ethnography, reflexivity, autoethnographic vignettes, ethnographic photography and ba...
Monday, May 31, 2010
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Looking for Japan in Germany... and Re-Thinking Orientalism
Saturday, May 29, 2010
My New Neighborhood in Frankfurt...
Monday, May 24, 2010
Where Osaka People Shop and Play
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Update: Kishin Shinoyama Charged over Nude Photos
VAOJ has been following this story for a while. Here's the latest (from AP):
A renowned Japanese photographer was indicted Thursday after he allegedly shot photos of a naked woman posing on a tombstone at a public cemetery.
Kishin Shinoyama, 69, was charged with public indecency and disrespect for a religious site for allegedly snapping the nude photographs in October 2008 at Tokyo's Aoyama cemetery, the Tokyo District Prosecutors Office said in a statement.
If convicted, Shinoyama faces up to six months in prison or a fine of up to 300,000 yen ($3,300).
The cemetery was one of a dozen public locations in Tokyo where two models posed nude for a photo collection titled, "No Nude by Kishin 20XX," which was released in January 2009.
Shinoyama said in a statement Thursday the models took off their clothes only briefly, "seconds or up to two minutes at the longest.http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif" He was concerned about the definition of public indecency, which could discourage artistic expression, he said.
But Shinoyama added, "I humbly accept the case as a lesson, and I will pursue my challenges to new forms of expression."
Shinoyama, a prolific photographer who for decades photographed a variety of genres, shot the "Sante Fe" book that sparked Japan's so-called "hair nude" phenomena in the 1990s. His collection of actress Rie Miyazawa exposing her pubic hair became a best seller, and eased the country's strict mores on nudity.
Here's how The Mainichi Daily News reported it:
Photographer Kishin Shinoyama has been summarily indicted by Tokyo public prosecutors for disrespect to a place of worship and public indecency for a 2008 nude photo shoot in a cemetery.
Shinoyama, 69, had originally fought the charges on the basis of freedom of expression, but has since submitted a letter of apology.
"My (artistic) expression is in danger of withering under the constant stream of reports about the investigation," the photographer commented. "I will take the incident as a lesson learned, and wish to move on and express myself in new ways."
According to the indictment, Shinoyama photographed an actress in the nude as she posed atop grave markers in the Aoyama Reien cemetery in Tokyo's Minato Ward on the night of Oct. 15, 2008. The actress was not indicted as she was following Shinoyama's directions.
Papers were originally filed with prosecutors accusing the photographer of shooting nude models in 12 public places, including a department store. The Tokyo Sub-District Public Prosecutors Office settled on the summary indictment of Shinoyama for submitting a report claiming the models would be in their underwear and going ahead with the shoot even after being warned by the police in September 2008, and to respond to the owners of the graves' desire for punishment.
The crime of disrespect to a place of worship -- defined in the Penal Code as overt disrespect against religious sites such as temples or cemeteries -- carries a maximum penalty of six months imprisonment or a 100,000-yen fine for acts such as pulling down gravestones. It is very unusual to apply the law to obscene acts.
A renowned Japanese photographer was indicted Thursday after he allegedly shot photos of a naked woman posing on a tombstone at a public cemetery.
Kishin Shinoyama, 69, was charged with public indecency and disrespect for a religious site for allegedly snapping the nude photographs in October 2008 at Tokyo's Aoyama cemetery, the Tokyo District Prosecutors Office said in a statement.
If convicted, Shinoyama faces up to six months in prison or a fine of up to 300,000 yen ($3,300).
The cemetery was one of a dozen public locations in Tokyo where two models posed nude for a photo collection titled, "No Nude by Kishin 20XX," which was released in January 2009.
Shinoyama said in a statement Thursday the models took off their clothes only briefly, "seconds or up to two minutes at the longest.http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif" He was concerned about the definition of public indecency, which could discourage artistic expression, he said.
But Shinoyama added, "I humbly accept the case as a lesson, and I will pursue my challenges to new forms of expression."
Shinoyama, a prolific photographer who for decades photographed a variety of genres, shot the "Sante Fe" book that sparked Japan's so-called "hair nude" phenomena in the 1990s. His collection of actress Rie Miyazawa exposing her pubic hair became a best seller, and eased the country's strict mores on nudity.
Here's how The Mainichi Daily News reported it:
Photographer Kishin Shinoyama has been summarily indicted by Tokyo public prosecutors for disrespect to a place of worship and public indecency for a 2008 nude photo shoot in a cemetery.
Shinoyama, 69, had originally fought the charges on the basis of freedom of expression, but has since submitted a letter of apology.
"My (artistic) expression is in danger of withering under the constant stream of reports about the investigation," the photographer commented. "I will take the incident as a lesson learned, and wish to move on and express myself in new ways."
According to the indictment, Shinoyama photographed an actress in the nude as she posed atop grave markers in the Aoyama Reien cemetery in Tokyo's Minato Ward on the night of Oct. 15, 2008. The actress was not indicted as she was following Shinoyama's directions.
Papers were originally filed with prosecutors accusing the photographer of shooting nude models in 12 public places, including a department store. The Tokyo Sub-District Public Prosecutors Office settled on the summary indictment of Shinoyama for submitting a report claiming the models would be in their underwear and going ahead with the shoot even after being warned by the police in September 2008, and to respond to the owners of the graves' desire for punishment.
The crime of disrespect to a place of worship -- defined in the Penal Code as overt disrespect against religious sites such as temples or cemeteries -- carries a maximum penalty of six months imprisonment or a 100,000-yen fine for acts such as pulling down gravestones. It is very unusual to apply the law to obscene acts.
Friday, May 21, 2010
VAOJ is going to Germany!
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Caption reads: Yea! Fedorowicz is coming to Frankfurt.
In another weird twist of globalization, an American professor is going to Germany to teach German students Japanese Sign Language in English...
I have been invited to teach visual anthropology and Japanese studies at the Institut für Ethnologie at Goethe-Universität (otherwise know as "the Frankfurt school") during the summer. Apparently there is a demand for learning about Japanese culture in Germany; Goethe students promise me they will show me the German take on Japan. The German students also want to learn how to make ethnographic films about Japanese culture and I am expecting some fascinating projects. It should be noted that graduate students at Goethe found me through this blog and petitioned their university to invite me. Many thanks to them, my students in Japan and regular readers of VAOJ for making all of this possible.
So look for some interesting tangents, twists and turns in VAOJ this summer.
For more information about Goethe's Institute for Ethnology's program, check out the student blog (in German):
http://www.ethno-fachschaft.de/
Click here for all of the Germany posts.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
The End of Spring 2010 - Another Successful Semester of JSL!
Another semester is ending (I am up to my neck in grading) and it's time to reflect about Japanese Sign Language. We had another successful semester of JSL study. I wish to especially thank J-sensei and our sempai, B-san and J-san, for taking on extra teaching responsibilities. Even though I couldn't be there all the time, it was great to see how much you learned. To all members of the group, please continue to study sign language no matter where you are. Remember (how could you forget?), we are all brothers and sisters... お疲れ様でした!
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Koshien Characters
Grow your own...
Picture and caption from Japan Today's Picture of the Day, 12 May 2010.
"A model wears Triumph International’s “Grow-Your-Own-Rice bra” in Tokyo on Wednesday. The bra, which transforms into a rice growing kit, allows the wearer to cultivate rice anytime, anywhere. It was created in hopes that more people will become familiar with farming and develop awareness of the importance of agriculture, the lingerie maker said."
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Monday, May 10, 2010
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