I always cringe, when I hear a cyclist with a camera having a tiff with someone, suddenly announce "Your on Camera". To me it always sounds wimpish, but it may stop someone carrying out a violent act if they know they are being filmed, but on the other hand, if the other person has committed a gross misnamenor and suddenly finds out that it has been filmed, then they could become more violent and try to destroy the camera and the evidence, even if if it means ripping your helmet off and probably your head still in it to stamp on it, or even chase you and try to run you over along with the camera. Discretion would probably be the best approach, and then the other person probably won't clam up, but carry on and damm themselves even more on camera.
Then I think it has been mentioned somewhere in the forums about the data protection act, such films etc taken from a camera mounted on a helmet should be for personal use, but when it is posted on the likes of You Tube, or in the forums etc, then suddenly it is in the public eye, and possibly someone could end up being sued.
Perhaps a warning sign stuck on the helmet could be useful, "Recording Equipment in use" to avoid confrontation before it starts, or even a cycling shirt with it emblazoned on the back in big letters, along with a bit of black painted dowel stuck to the top of the helmet to look like a camera, Especially if you can make one big enough out of polystyrene to look like the ones that they had on "World of Sport" many years ago with multiple lenses to stick on top of the helmet, that should put the cackers up motorists carving you up.
Capt Mannering to Cpl Jones when he had some far fetched suggestion "I think you're wandering into the realms of fantasy, Jones."
Then I think it has been mentioned somewhere in the forums about the data protection act, such films etc taken from a camera mounted on a helmet should be for personal use, but when it is posted on the likes of You Tube, or in the forums etc, then suddenly it is in the public eye, and possibly someone could end up being sued.
Perhaps a warning sign stuck on the helmet could be useful, "Recording Equipment in use" to avoid confrontation before it starts, or even a cycling shirt with it emblazoned on the back in big letters, along with a bit of black painted dowel stuck to the top of the helmet to look like a camera, Especially if you can make one big enough out of polystyrene to look like the ones that they had on "World of Sport" many years ago with multiple lenses to stick on top of the helmet, that should put the cackers up motorists carving you up.
Capt Mannering to Cpl Jones when he had some far fetched suggestion "I think you're wandering into the realms of fantasy, Jones."