New policy will broadly prohibit recordings of University settings, events without explicit approval of all attendees

November 11, 2025 1 min read

1 Comment

Cynthia Torres and Benedict Hooper
Daily Princetonian

Excerpt: The Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC) voted overwhelmingly on Monday to prohibit any recording of a broad category of campus activities without the permission of all participants, with few exceptions. 

“Princeton prohibits the installation or use of any device for listening, observing, photographing, recording, amplifying, transmitting or broadcasting sounds or events occurring in any place where the individual or group involved has a reasonable expectation of being free from unwanted surveillance, eavesdropping, recording or observation without the knowledge and consent of all participants subject to such recordings,” the policy reads.

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1 Response

Ron Coleman
Ron Coleman

November 17, 2025

This excerpt somewhat misses the lede, which is: “Additionally, the policy states that recording can also be prohibited at public meetings or events ‘when it has been explicitly stated that recording is not permitted.’”

Prohibiting the surreptitious recording of private conversations, gatherings and conduct is not the only policy a community can have, but it is certainly a reasonable one to choose. Prohibiting the recording of public meetings, however, seems to raise a very different set of issues, including potential abuses.

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