Many infra-red cameras can 'see through' certain clothes. It appears that some celebs have been getting upset by people taking revealing photos of them so that now you have to sign an End User License Agreement before you can get, for example, the Fujifilm Finepix IS-1. See the notice at the bottom of this page:
http://www.fujifilmusa.com/JSP/fuji/...ductIS-Pro.jsp
Quote:
You hereby acknowledge and agree that your use of the camera's UV and/or IR light energy sensitive capabilities, as enabled by Fujifilm's camera firmware, will be purely to accomplish a legitimate business purpose in the medical, forensic, fire investigative, law enforcement, scientific, systems integrators, museum/antiquity, aerial photographic survey, astronomy, professional nature and fine art photography, photographic education and local and federal government markets.
In addition, you further agree not to use the camera's hardware and firmware enabled capabilities to engage in unethical photographic conduct involving the violation of personal privacy, child endangerment, lewd photography, and or paparazzi like activities.
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Swimwear manufacturers are fighting back too:
http://www.weirdasianews.com/2007/05...r-photography/