Photography and creative portfolio sites handle a unique type of sensitive data: images of people. Publishing photos of individuals, sharing client galleries, or using images for portfolio purposes all carry legal implications around image rights, model releases, and GDPR's provisions on biometric data. The GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is the world's most comprehensive data privacy law, applying to any organization that processes data of EU residents — regardless of where the organization is based.
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All sections are included and pre-filled for Photography / Creative businesses
Introduction
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Information We Collect
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How We Use Your Information
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How We Share Your Information
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Cookies and Tracking Technologies
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Data Retention
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Your Rights Under the GDPR
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Your California Privacy Rights (CCPA)
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Your Rights Under the DPDPA (India)
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Children's Privacy
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Data Security
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Third-Party Links
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Changes to This Privacy Policy
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Contact Us
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The GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is the world's most comprehensive data privacy law, applying to any organization that processes data of EU residents — regardless of where the organization is based. Non-compliance can result in fines of up to €20 million or 4% of annual global turnover, whichever is higher.
Photography and creative portfolio sites handle a unique type of sensitive data: images of people. Publishing photos of individuals, sharing client galleries, or using images for portfolio purposes all carry legal implications around image rights, model releases, and GDPR's provisions on biometric data.
Data typically collected by Photography / Creative businesses: client contact info, project files, commissioned images, model release data, portfolio usage permissions, payment details
Yes. If you collect any personal data from users — including email addresses, analytics cookies, or payment information — you are legally required to have a Privacy Policy under GDPR (EU) 2016/679, ePrivacy Directive (Cookie Law), National implementing laws. Non-compliance can result in significant fines.
A GDPR-compliant Privacy Policy for Photography / Creative businesses must disclose: what data you collect (client contact info, project files, commissioned images, model release data, portfolio usage permissions, payment details), the legal basis for processing, data retention periods, and users' rights. Lawful basis for processing must be identified and documented (consent, contract, legitimate interest, etc.).
A Photography / Creative typically collects: client contact info, project files, commissioned images, model release data, portfolio usage permissions, payment details. Under GDPR, each category of data must be explicitly disclosed in your Privacy Policy along with the purpose for collecting it and the legal basis used. Failing to disclose any collected data category is a violation.
Under GDPR, a DPO is required for organizations that carry out large-scale processing of sensitive data or systematic monitoring of individuals. Many Photography / Creative companies fall into this category due to their data volume. The DPO must be independent, have expert knowledge of data protection law, and be reachable by data subjects.