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One of the world’s largest credit and debit card issuers, the technology giant, Mastercard, has recently launched what it calls the Smart Islands program in the region.

While over the last ten years, tourism growth has shown significant and steady growth with small and medium size enterprises (SME’s) throughout the area playing a critical role in the economic ecosystem according to an Engagement Bureau press release, ‘only a tiny portion of companies in the region accept electronic payments.

Today, out of the total of 1.4 million merchants in the region, only 10 per cent of those are accepting electronic payments’. When you consider our principal tourism markets and the overwhelming use of cards to settle almost every type of purchase transaction, this is a staggeringly low percentage, especially when you take into account, often there is a foreign currency exchange element taking place.

Independent research clearly shows that tourists’ are far more likely to spend money where making payments are convenient and secure.

On launching the initiative, Jimena Elia, Director of Market Development for Mastercard Caribbean stated, ‘innovation is in Mastercards’s DNA’ and ‘we are excited to reveal this multi-layered technology that can help expand the tourism industry’s earning potential and build the Caribbean’s resilience to natural disasters by developing smarter islands built on cashless societies’.

To me, at least, it is a no-brainer for our Government to partner with commercially driven organisations like this, to better track tourism spending and allow them to collect taxes, where they are due, rather than continuing to haemorrhage valuable foreign exchange, which frequently evaporates unrecorded offshore, where little or no national benefit is extracted.

Or perhaps the article explains it in better words – ‘The data and tourism insights that the Mastercard Small Islands Program provides can help Governments and Destination Marketing Organisations (DMO’s) define a country’s ideal tourist, enabling more efficient marketing investments with higher ROI (return on investment)’.

Years ago, sadly without success, I lobbied for a Barbados branded credit and debit card, where all purchases paid for by our visitors, both on-island and the means to get here (airfares), earned points or miles which could be re-deemed on their next visit. Just by using this particular card as payment, the holder would also qualify for additional discounts or benefits, like the island-wide 30 plus lunch

re-DISCOVER restaurants offering 10 per cent reduction or a fixed price dinner at another 20 eating options. Of course, it could be similarly used at all types of accommodation, car rental, activities, attractions, shopping, dining and all other possibilities, increasing the likelihood of visitors returning and building destination loyalty.

With an increasing myriad of choices, brand loyalty has become an increasingly critical part in the marketing of products and services to retain existing clients.

After all, enticing a returning client is less expense than finding a new one.


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138 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – Acceptance of Electronic Payment a Must”


  1. Kerrie Symmonds tells the woman who scolded the nude tourist on the beach that it was none of her business
    However in my mind the woan actions goes along with the inefficient manner of bureaucracy is dispensed in govt
    The rule of law never is directed efficiently to be understood
    Posting of sign which tells of such laws against nudity on beaches would have been sufficient in avoiding such an embarrassing situation which took place between the tourist and the lady on the beach


  2. A little horse and cart here.

    It is not the Governments that need to act but instead an educational program should be initiated by Mastercard to the thousands of small businesses that do not accept credit cards.

    If I were Mastercard I would partner with the Chambers of Commerce, Hotel Associations and others groups in the islands to do a wide promotion for acceptance of their services. I know that some merchants refuse to accept American Express due to the 4%+ commission but my experience is that both Mastercard & Visa have considerably lower commissions. At the end of the day the ease of payment for a service means that more business will be attained.

    Card payments are the norm in developed societies and just seeing the Mastercard or Visa logos gives the purchaser a sense of familiarity and trust.


  3. RE: “Kerrie Symmonds tells the woman who scolded the nude tourist on the beach that it was none of her business…”

    I read: ” Minister of Tourism Kerrie Symmonds, who spoke to Starcom yesterday, said he believed the situation could have been handled differently.”

    “In my judgement it required nothing other than to direct them to the fact that the law does not allow it and encourage them to properly clothe themselves.”

    Please explain what in Symmonds’ comments could be reasonably interpreted as him telling the lady “that it was none of her business?”

    You are “appallingly dishonest.”


  4. @Andrew Nehaul

    It should be a joint effort, the countries like Barbados have the relationships and MasterCard and Visa have the power of the brand and large budgets.

  5. Piece the Legend Avatar
    Piece the Legend

    @ Loveridge

    You said and I quote

    “…To me, at least, it is a no-brainer for our Government to partner with commercially driven organisations like this, to better track tourism spending and allow them to collect taxes, where they are due, rather than continuing to haemorrhage valuable foreign exchange, which frequently evaporates unrecorded offshore, where little or no national benefit is extracted…”

    De ole man has long said this 20 years ago. AND DONE MORE THAN SAID IT!

    Heheheheh

    But here is the thing about this Loverage.

    And this is where this ties into it being necessary to “enshackle and enslave” the regional populations AGAIN!

    “…‘The data and tourism insights that the Mastercard Small Islands Program provides can help Governments and Destination Marketing Organisations (DMO’s) define a country’s ideal tourist, enabling more efficient marketing investments with higher ROI (return on investment)’…”

    WE must again become HEWERS OF WOOD & DRAWERS OF WATER!

    Emancipation IS WASTED on a people who are slaves!

    One interesting thing a out this is that when you spoke of ReDiscover the same black people give you licks heheheh

    Maybe de MasterCark people saw dis right?

    http://imgur.com/ds7jvqt

    Black people ARE NOT READY FOR EMANCIPATION Loveridge.

    All emancipation SHOULD BE IMMEDIATELY RESCINDED!


  6. What is dishonest is Kerrie Symmonds opening his big mouth and not holding govt bureaucracy responsible
    for the problem
    There would have been no problem if their were sign posting stating the law
    Most appalling is that the lady action cause embarrassment to govt and the people whose nakedness was shown all across social media in full blown manner
    For you Artax to be calling me dishonest reflects on your quick and dishonest application to shoot the messenger and disregard the message


  7. There is a saying that when you visit a foreign country there is some responsibility on the visitor to find out the dos and donts. If one is a naturalist/nudist all the more reason to ask a question of your hotel or apartment. No issue here.


  8. David your comment speaks as to why barbados is stuck socially and economically
    Wunna keep doing things backwards and antiquated
    A country that depends on tourism takes all precautions to accommodate the visitor
    Not everyone would go to all distance to know rules or regulations


  9. @Adrian Loveridge “Today, out of the total of 1.4 million merchants in the region, only 10 per cent of those are accepting electronic payments’.”

    I am surprised that this number is so low. A lot of tourists must pass by a lot of merchants, and a lot of merchants must miss a lot of sales because they can’t pay with their card. I mean who wants to walk around with a lot of cash while in a strange country.


  10. If you chat with many business people especially mom and pop outfits they complain about the fee banks charge for credit card transactions.


  11. @ Silly Woman
    Why are you surprised. All these corporate vultures refuse to spend money on innovation and technology. All they do is whine and believe they are entitled. Next thing you will hear is that the government should lend them money to enhance their operations.
    I will say it again: The so called tourism practitioners have spent time chasing beach vendors off the beach and viciously undermining all the small tourism players.
    Lazy indifferent parasites.


  12. @ Mariposa

    It was the woman’s business. If they want to sun bathe in the nude then go to some other country. Apart from a few isolated beaches in the UK, they cannot even do that in Britain.
    The woman is right, and buffoon Symmonds is once more wrong.


  13. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 11:11 AM “It was the woman’s business.”

    As your gran and mine would have said “you have to know time and place”

    The tourists were wrong to be naked in public even if on a secluded beach. although I have seen Ninja man naked on Broad Street during high daytime more than once and I certainly did not loudly chastise him.

    But the woman with her bombastic self was also wrong. A quiet discreet word would have done just as well. And posting people’s photos on social media without their consent is also wrong. A friend of mine had this done to him, foolish people sent a photo of his traffic accident dead son to him even before the father knew that his boy was dead. Once one of my children’s friends sent a video of me in town to my kid without my consent. I did not even notice that I was being videoed. When I found out I was offended, even though I was fully clothed and in a public place. I am NOT a public personality and I do not wished to have my photograph taken and PUBLISHED to all of the world without my consent.

    I am sure that these tourists are not public personalities and do not wish to have their photos taken and PUBLISHED without their consent.

    Recently at a funeral i saw the same damn foolishness. When the pastor ased those who wanted to to come forward to pay their last respects yu should have seen the number of idiotic people with smart phones taking pictures of the dead person.

    Not even the dead should be photographed when dead unless they had previously given consent, or unless consent was obtained from the next of kin.

    You Hal ought really to stop misleading the foolish Mariposa.


  14. Was it a a breach of any privacy law? Is it within the law to be nude on a public beach? Should law breakers be apprehended? Why would it be better to whisper that they had broken the law, if they had? Ninja man is mentally ill, are you suggesting the tourists were mentally ill?
    Tourists should not be allowed to come to Barbados and do what thy cannot do in their home countries. The woman was right and @Mariposa was right for calling out the buffoon Symmonds.


  15. F..off silly woman. U need to find your place and stay in your lane
    My difference of opinion in this matter place the embarrassment on govt that is inefficient
    Dont give a rats a ss what u think of me
    Have never been impressed by any of your comments either
    If u want to pick a fight with Mariposa u choose the wrong person


  16. Yes Hal u are correct OBLONG HEAD Kerrie Symmonds sees only the lady who was doing the job of govt officials as wrong
    Far from it for him to admit where responsibility lies on govt shoulders in matters that would embarrass govt


  17. @February 3, 2020 11:59 AM “Was it a a breach of any privacy law?”

    Seeing the people naked was not a breech, reprimanding them for their nudity was not a breech.

    But “YES” PUBLISHING their photo without their consent was a breech of the Computer Misuse Act.


  18. Silly woman the issue now places it on words to effect as to whether the woman informing the tourist about the laws was incorrect in doing so
    Kerrie respond rather than addressing the law and the inefficient manner in which it is implemented attacked the woman actions which took the responsibility off govt
    Your responses /comments fails within such a frame line as Kerrie to blame the woman
    Hypocrite


  19. @Mariposa February 3, 2020 12:00 PM “F..off silly woman. U need to find your place and stay in your lane.”

    My place is HUMAN BEING, and my lane is BARBADOS.

    Staying right here until death do us part.


  20. I do not know anything about the Barbados Computer Misuse Act, but will find it strange that if someone caught a person or persons committing an illegal act and took a contemporaneous photo of that act, to interpret that as illegal makes the Bajan law a bigger ass than it already is.
    Again, the woman was right and those who condemn her are amoral. @Mariposa was right to call out silly Symmonds.


  21. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 12:21 PM “I do not know anything about the Barbados Computer Misuse Act, but will find it strange that if someone caught a person or persons committing an illegal act and took a contemporaneous photo of that act, to interpret that as illegal makes the Bajan law a bigger ass than it already is.”

    Taking the photo is ONE act.

    PUBLISHING the photo is a SECOND act.

    PUBLISHING the photo is certainly illegal.

    As your moral gran and mine knew “two wrongs don’t make a right”

    The woman was WRONG/UNLAWFUL/IMMORAL to publish the photo.


  22. Correction
    @Silly woman

    Your responses /comments falls within the same frame line as Kerrie to blame the woman


  23. Silly woman
    The problem with some of wunna so called intellectual bajans is that wunna think wunna know every dam thing and can insult or berate people any which way u like
    Dont give a rat a.ss what u think
    Next time u try locking horns with Mariposa think twice before crossing over in my lane
    Here u come trying to place the woman into a legal wrangling talking about legal law to make a point of proving the lady was wrong
    It is people like u who can be easily described as having crab in barrell mentality


  24. You do not know anything about my gran. You know nothing about right and wrong, what is lawful and morality. Publishing the picture cannot be illegal, ipso facto. The normal purpose of taking a picture is to share it with a third party. The only question is did she share it with the right third party.
    Given the reaction of the buffoon Symmonds, she was right to share it with a wider public. The woman did the right thing as a law-abiding citizen. English tourists should not be allowed to visit Barbados and do what they cannot do in the UK and which is against the laws of Barbados.
    I cannot imagine Canadians wanting to sun bathe in Canada. @Mariposa was right to call out the dummy Symmonds.


  25. Once more, we have Adrian claiming — as he does every other month of the year — that “valuable foreign exchange … evaporates offshore”.

    I have not seen a clear, step-by-step explanation from Adrian, the blog master, or anyone else, of just how foreign exchange earnings “evaporate.” Businesses that earn foreign exchange have bills to pay in Barbados — in Barbados dollars. Explain the source of funds to pay these expenses if foreign exchange revenues are “evaporating”.

  26. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Hal, you are not serious 12:21PM are you!

    U are suggesting that if person A is in breach of a law and person B then breaches the law surrounding privacy and highlights the acts of person A (under the computer misuse act in this case) that the second breach is not illegal because the first one was!

    Really. OK, I learned something today. Interesting.

    @SimpleSimon, you are quite right in your thrust on both the beach scene and the subsequent remarks particularly at 12:25.

    And BTW I believe we have long learned that Mariposa is rather uncouth and illogical on all matters political. She/he descends quickly into personal insults and ’emphatic’ language when really no further emphasis is needed to make the point. So why try to debate rationally with the blogger!

    @Skinner, not so fast re ‘All these corporate vultures refuse to spend money on innovation and technology. All they do is whine and believe they are entitled.”

    The Blogmaster is ABSOLUTELY accurate re fees and mom n pop businesses.

    I would strongly suggest to you to ask Mr Loveridge to PROPERLY define the list of 1.4 millions vendors region wide. I expect that you will find that many of the “corporate vultures” to whom u refer are in fact quite technologically comfortable in that 10 % or 140,000 businesses.

    Let’s get REAL folks. Is that number for Caribbean islands proper, not inclusive of DR and PR for example.

    How many do we think would be in Bim for example.

    The numbers alone belie the argument he is making in my view and speaks to @David’s clear knowledge and understanding… (@Pieces too should know better).

    So respectful to @Loverirdge but his is a bogus argument that does NOT properly paint the true picture of what’s afoot.

    The push by MC n Visa is to capture the small players who always ran from their fees… And why … Well because of NFC and the various payment apps on phones that will be ubiquitous real soon…

    The penetration and prevalence of card use in the tourism areas of the region is significant with the main players and has been for years… but with the small beach vendors for the boat cruise or parasailing etc not so much.

    Lata.


  27. @Dee Word

    Why do we bother? Obviously that 1.4 million number is distorted because of the countries you correctly identified are not as heavily penetrated with the technology. Will attempt to research the numbers as time permits.


  28. I do not know anything about the Barbados Computer Misuse Act, but will find it strange that if someone caught a person or persons committing an illegal act and took a contemporaneous photo of that act, to interpret that as illegal makes the Bajan law a bigger ass than it already is.
    Again, the woman was right and those who condemn her are amoral. @Mariposa was right to call out silly Symmonds.(Quote)

    @Hal, you are not serious 12:21PM are you!
    U are suggesting that if person A is in breach of a law and person B then breaches the law surrounding privacy and highlights the acts of person A (under the computer misuse act in this case) that the second breach is not illegal because the first one was!(Quote)

    What is the law of privacy in Barbados? Has a person a right not to have a picture taken? Can a citizen’s arrest be construed as an assault? Should the woman have arrested these nude rogues rather than warn them off and taken a picture to record the incident?

  29. William Skinner Avatar

    de Pedantic Dribbler
    The truth is that we continue to give the private sector a pass. We talk about the “ease “ of doing business. I submit that the traditional corporate elites operate solely in its interest. I don’t know about the DR and PR but I am going further by saying that our private sector has never been in the forefront of innovation.
    And Adrian can continue to ignore the damage done to the economy because his colleagues spend more time whining than anything related to innovation.
    His articles when critically read represent an outstanding failure of those in the industry of which he is an expert. Time and time again he has clearly shown that they seldom get anything right.

    On the question of the tourist woman being photographed naked: Less than a month ago, a black naked woman’s picture was all over the papers . This citizen of Barbados was known to have mental challenges. I did not hear about protecting her rights. Now some tourist woman comes and skin out herself on our beach and because she was unbraided for her obscene behavior all hell breaks loose.

  30. Piece the Legend Avatar
    Piece the Legend

    @ the Honourable Blogmaster

    You said and I quote

    “…There is a saying that when you visit a foreign country there is some responsibility on the visitor to find out the dos and donts.

    If one is a naturalist/nudist all the more reason to ask a question of your hotel or apartment…”

    It was and is this simple!

    They COULD NOT DO IT IN THE UK, CANADA OR THE USA without asking and finding out.

    Why do it in Barbados?

    And the answer is “because I as a white man, can slap wunna black women botsies, and NOT A JUDGE GOING DO ME SHY$E!!!”

    Kerrie Oblong Head Simmons IS A JACKASS!!!


  31. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 12:48 PM “I cannot imagine Canadians wanting to sun bathe in Canada.”

    Well not now when the temperatures all over the country are sub zero. But actually at least in Ontario is is lawful for BOTH men and WOMEN to walk in public without their tops just because they feel like it or because they wish to sunbathe.


  32. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 12:48 PM “You do not know anything about my gran.”

    True.

    Sorry if I insulted your gran by referring to her as moral.

    I apologize.

    My grans, both of them were moral ladies, they knew that two wrongs don’t make a right.

  33. Piece the Legend Avatar
    Piece the Legend

    @ De Pedantic Dribbler

    You have attributed to me something other that what I specifically said!

    1.I supported the fact that Card technology is useful in cashless transactions

    2.I supported the fact the IN ADDITION TO THE PRIMARY USE, that said technology lent itself to additional technologies

    3.I went on to say that Barbados and the wider region was, is and will always be devoid of ideas as it relates to harvesting this type of data strategically

    4.I went on to say that MasterCard was 20 years behind but even though such was the case we, indigenous peoples, visionles as we are SHOULD HAVE EMANCIPATION RESCINDED!

    I have not agreed with any other of Loveridge ‘s statements.

    But then again, AS MR. HAL AUSTIN WOULD SAY, this is the Barbadian condition

    A man makes 10 statements and I agree with 4 THEREFORE I AGREE WITH EVERYTHING THE MAN SAYS!


  34. @Piece the Legend February 3, 2020 1:25 PM “They COULD NOT DO IT IN THE UK, CANADA OR THE USA without asking and finding out.”

    Actually in Canada they can do the half naked thingy, and not only on the beaches, but on the high streets also. It is perfectly lawful for a lady to walk topless down Yonge Street (weather permitting of course) and alas for you guys, especially for you Piece the weather forbids for about 46 weeks per year.


  35. re “I cannot imagine Canadians wanting to sun bathe in Canada.

    SUMMER IN TORONTO

    Hanlan’s Point Beach was a traditional site for nude sunbathing for decades. In 1999, Toronto City Council approved a one-year pilot project for a nude beach at Hanlan’s Point following a proposal by naturist organization and Councillor Kyle Rae. In 2000, the council extended the project for another two years. Finally in 2002, the clothing-optional beach was made permanent.[2]


  36. @ William

    Can an ordinary working black Bajan go on a West Coast beach nude without facing arrest? And what would Symmonds say?
    A prostitute is someone who would allow a naked tourist to misbehave as long as s/he pays? We need foreign currency.


  37. ” Wreck Beach… is an internationally-acclaimed 7.8 km long Nudist beach, located in Vancouver, BC, Canada, making it North America’s largest naturist beach.
    Just 15 minutes from downtown Vancouver, Wreck Beach is easily accessible for visitors from over 150 countries, and generates over $60 million in tourist revenue annually.”


  38. Cut the sanctimonius bullspit!

    ” Knoll Beach at Studland Bay in Dorset is one of the best nude beaches in Britain. And that’s official. This part of the National Trust’s managed seashore on Studland Bay is regularly named to Britain’s top beach lists. The part of it, known as Knoll Beach, is the location of an officially recognized nudist beach.”


  39. Here they go all come iyt like flies landing on s.hit to talk about computer Mus use Act
    Yeah yeah yeah
    But the crux of the story is not about the Computer Misuse act but the woman having a civic right to inform the tourist about the law which prohibits nudity
    Well of course the obstructionist would be quick to hold fast a position as a distraction upon which they can tar and feather the woman for her actions
    It never ceases to amaze how quick blacks are to throw each other under the bus in this case where the woman was right
    Kerrie oblong head needs to be schooled in civics and the right of a citizen to express and to protect the laws of the land

  40. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Hal, you are an experienced and knowledgeable man so please stop conflating issues and misleading on facts of reason .

    I don’t know ur gran either 😂 so I will only surmise that either her or someone else long again said ‘not to answer a question with another question’ …but that’s what I still will do!

    You asked : What is the law of privacy in Barbados?

    Well, what is law of privavcy under common law or statute based law generally?

    Does it not attempt to safeguard private acts from unwarranted public disclosure.

    Granted if u are on a public beach and I zoom in on you there then I may fail at claiming ‘privacy’.

    But at the basic moral level to which u speak, if I am on a secluded or not very visible part of a beach and u zoom my pic and broadcast it to the world who is the one taking prurient pleasure!

    You asked: Has a person a right not to have a picture taken? Can a citizen’s arrest be construed as an assault?”

    I retort when are you given a right to take a singular, non group picture and abuse privacy as you like. … And not likely be in breach of image rights regulations!

    I ask, when is an arrest by a citizen or public official given legal right to broadcast an image that breaches the arrested person’s rights!

    Can a police officer photograph Mary Brown when he arrests her for indecent exposure down at (once secluded) Maycocks Bay and then publish her explicit naked images on his FB feed to get a vital reaction or as he may say to show how ‘depraved these people are’!

    Can one of your constables photo a Muslim guy he arrested and publish his image widely as another terrorist?

    Can any of them do that and not be sued and lose jobs???

    You asked: Should the woman have arrested these nude rogues rather than warn them off and taken a picture to record the incident?

    I query what insidious harm were they doing that she would need to arrest them!

    Of course she should have warned them off that such was NOT allowed on that beach in Bdos. Next step use the same phone and report to police if she thought that children may also come in contact and be visibly assaulted by the ‘rogues’.

    What right did she have to take their image…was this for presentation in the possible court case as evidence?

    There is always a place and time for everything and being nude there was neither place nor time… But your validation is that one lapse of common sense is validated by another equly bad lapse.

    May I REMIND you that the act of broadcasting sexily explicit images electronically is ILLEGAL in some jurisdictions… And that would be for images taken of a Legal act or an ILLEGAL one.

    I gone.


  41. @Mariposa February 3, 2020 1:50 PM “the woman having a civic right to inform the tourist about the law which prohibits nudity”

    Nobody is arguing with the woman’s right/duty/civic responsibility “about the law which prohibits nudity” That was her FIRST action.

    But then she took a SECOND action when she took the photo.

    Then she took a THIRD action when she PUBLISHED the photo.


  42. De pedantic

    And BTW I believe we have long learned that Mariposa is rather uncouth and illogical on all matters political. She/he descends quickly into personal insults and ’emphatic’ language when really no further emphasis is needed to make the point. So why try to debate rationally with

    You got to be kidding or just down right disingenuous with those comments about Mariposa
    The many times that people here have cuss Mariposa keft right and centre is beyond counting
    You must be stone cold drunk or out of your mind
    Silly woman a person who knows nothing about me has been relentless in her negative and berating comments towards me and i never respond
    Now she has nerve to call me Foolish then i responded accordingly
    If u dont like me response too bad next time scroll by u hypocrite

  43. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Hal
    We are supposed to go after locals not tourists. Like you said, we need the foreign exchange.
    Just like we can cuss black politicians all day but find excuses for all others.
    Like I said a mentally challenged black citizen is captured nude and nobody speaks of her rights.
    A naked tourist woman picture gets taken and a government minister steps .
    Priorities………………….my boy priorities.


  44. Silly woman.So who cares about the second or third action
    The story never talks about what happen in its entirety
    However not surprising that some of your thinking would venture into that legal area which would hold the lady accountable
    As far as that aspect of law is concerned that is entirely between her and the tourist
    However rather than u applause the lady for her actions you make it necessary to bring talk about a Computer Misuse Act or what ever
    But the again this is Barbados where if a black person steals a salt bread they can be thrown in jail
    Now it seems that if a citizen perform a civic duty they will be ridicule


  45. Can’t find the Caribbean Court f Justice decision now, maybe someone who is more familiar with the court can find it. Bu I believe that the court has ruled that nude photographs taken in private with mutual consent ought not to be SHARED, BROADCAST or PUBLISHED with out the consent of the one pictured.

    Probably tens of millions of people have taken nude photographs of themselves and of each other for THEIR mutual pleasure, but do NOT have consent to share them with others. To share such photos is unlawful, even though taking the photo was quite legal, but sharing, BROADCASTING, or PUBLISHING them is not.


  46. @De Pedantic

    Your discussion is beyond me. I am gone.


  47. Is was also WRONG, WRONG, WRONG TO publish the photograph of the mentaly ill black women.

    What sort of idiot believes that it is ok to publish WITHOUT CONSENT a photo of a private in extreme emotional distress, even while in a public place?

    Probably the same idiots whose phones are smarter than they are, taken and broadcasting photos of dead or dying people and sending such photos to the parents, spouses and children of the dead and dying.


  48. @Mariposa February 3, 2020 2:08 PM “Computer Misuse Act or what ever.”

    Wasn’t the Computer Misuse Act passed by your beloved DLP?

    Askin’ fuh a fren?


  49. @Wiliiam

    You should hush.

    If the blogmaster has time several comments can be identified where concerns were expressed as to why the mentally challenged person was WhatsApped all over the place. Mind you her condition was made known post capture.

    Conflating issues indeed.

    The issue here is that the lady did not have to threaten to post the video on social media. She could have stopped after she advised the tourists nudity is illegal in Barbados. The minister is 100% correct.

    We live to carry this race thing too far.


  50. @Simple Simon

    Have to time to refit nonsense by people with declared agendas.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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