2 Taiwanese nationals nabbed for filming U.S. air base facilities (koreajoongangdaily.joins.com)
from schizoidman@lemm.ee to world@lemmy.world on 12 May 11:38
https://lemm.ee/post/63739293

#world

threaded - newest

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 11:44 next collapse

How can filming be illegal?

PeterisBacon@lemm.ee on 12 May 11:54 next collapse

U. S. AIR BASE FACILITIES.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 12:50 collapse

During an air show. A Show. For public. With planes. They took pictures of an air show.

Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de on 12 May 12:53 next collapse

Read the article!

”Usually, visitors are free to take pictures at air shows, but the U.S. military prohibited citizens of certain countries, including China and Taiwan, from entering the Osan Air Power Days event due to a recent series of illegal filming of Korean military facilities by Chinese people.

But the suspects violated the ban and secretly entered the air show venue …”

catloaf@lemm.ee on 12 May 12:54 collapse

They took pictures of the facilities and operational aircraft, not the airshow. That’s suspicious enough to detain someone.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 13:35 collapse

Aren’t operational aircraft integral part of an air show? I never personally seen one but I can’t imagine an air show without operational aircraft. And where does it say they took pictures of the facilities?

catloaf@lemm.ee on 12 May 13:40 next collapse

No. Usually it’s only demonstration aircraft like the Thunderbirds, Blue Angels, and the Golden Knights. And private pilot stunts. Sometimes they’ll do operational fighter jets showing off, but what the article is talking about is the ones not in the show.

And it literally says “facilities” in the headline.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 14:00 collapse

Titles are often clickbait. That’s why it’s good to read the article:

“Usually, visitors are free to take pictures at air shows, but the U.S. military prohibited citizens of certain countries, including China and Taiwan, from entering the Osan Air Power Days event due to a recent series of illegal filming of Korean military facilities by Chinese people.

But the suspects violated the ban and secretly entered the air show venue to commit the illegal act.”

The article also says " The police are currently reviewing whether to apply for an arrest warrant for them, the agency added. ".

So for now they are not even charged with anything. This is just badly written, clickbait article. It’s not even clear if they broke the law by filming anything or just entering the air show while being Taiwanese. For all we know they were just escorted out after someone checked their documents and the author invented everything else.

PeterisBacon@lemm.ee on 12 May 15:00 collapse

READ THE ARTICLE. Jesus. It literally explains it IN the article lmfao

remon@ani.social on 12 May 11:54 next collapse

When there is a law that says so.

pennomi@lemmy.world on 12 May 12:11 next collapse

When it’s espionage. I don’t know if it was in this case but military bases are supposed to remain mostly private.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 12:49 collapse

" But the suspects violated the ban and secretly entered the air show venue to commit the illegal act. "

They entered an open venue but did it “secretly”? WTF? Basically they broke some “no pictures” rule of an air show but instead of being asked to leave the venue they are charged with spying. Pretty insane.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 12 May 13:41 collapse

A military facility is not an open venue.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 13:50 collapse

This was during an air shop open to the public. Do you think they invited people to just walk around an army base? Or maybe there was some specific area the public could enter?

catloaf@lemm.ee on 12 May 13:56 collapse

If it’s like the ones I’ve been to, it is not open to the public. You have to buy tickets and show ID. And you are restricted to certain areas.

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 14:02 collapse

That’s what I meant. It’s not like they sneaked into closed airbase. They bought tickets or just entered with everyone else. The problem was there is specific law forbidding Taiwanese citizens from attending. They are not charged with anything.

Valmond@lemmy.world on 12 May 12:28 next collapse

It isn’t, you can film people in their homes, and in the college showers.

/s

ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net on 12 May 13:37 collapse

Ok, so legally the air base is like a shower and airplanes are like nude kids? Makes sense.

Valmond@lemmy.world on 12 May 16:28 collapse

Happy that cleared it up then!

Nougat@fedia.io on 12 May 12:34 collapse

The article is short, read it.

yesman@lemmy.world on 12 May 17:28 collapse

If you want to keep your planes secret, maybe don’t showcase them to the public?

I mean come on! this would be very different if they were filming operations at a military base and not a show put on by the goddamn military.