Under Russian legislation, the direct answer is no, they do not have the right. Posting photos where a child is identified without prior written consent from their legal representatives (parents or guardians) is a violation of federal laws.
Key normative acts:
Federal Law No. 436-FZ of December 29, 2010 "On Protecting Children from Information Harmful to Their Health and Development." This law requires compliance with the interests of children when disseminating any information affecting them.
Federal Law No. 152-FZ of July 27, 2006 "On Personal Data" (152-FZ). This is the main regulator. A photo is considered a biometric personal data (paragraph 1, Article 11) as it allows to establish a person's identity. The processing of such data (including collection, recording, storage, dissemination) is permitted only with the written consent of the personal data subject (Articles 9, 11).
An important nuance: For children under 14 years of age, such consent must be given by parents (legal representatives). From the age of 14, a teenager can sign it independently.
The consent must indicate specific processing purposes (for example, "posting on the school's official website in the "Our Achievements" section"), methods of use, and may indicate the duration of its validity.
Article 152.1 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation "Protection of the Image of a Citizen." The publication and further use of an image (including a photo) are permitted only with the consent of this citizen. After the death of a citizen, such consent may be given by their children or spouse. For minors, consent is given by parents.
Exceptions (Article 152.1 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation) that DO NOT apply to school photos:
The image is used in state, public, or other public interests (for example, search for a criminal).
The photo was taken in a public place at a public event (concert, rally, sports competition) and the child is not the main subject. However, even in this case, judicial practice tends to consider the rights of children and parents if the image is used by the institution for its own purposes.
Thus, the "school information resource" (website, social media group) is not a public event, but a targeted use of the child's image in the interests of the institution itself, which requires consent.
Posting photos without consent entails a number of serious risks:
Administrative liability. Under Article 13.11 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation, fines are provided for violations of the procedure for the collection, storage, or use of personal data: for officials (directors) — from 10,000 to 20,000 rubles; for legal entities (schools) — from 60,000 to 100,000 rubles.
Civil liability. Parents have the right to demand the deletion of photos and compensation for moral damage through the court (Article 151 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation).
Reputational risks. Conflict with parents, negative attention from regulatory authorities and the public.
Risks for the child's safety. Unauthorized publication of children's photos in the public domain can potentially be used by criminals (digital security issues, tracking of child routes and habits, risk of creating fake profiles).
Example from judicial practice: In 2020, a court in Novosibirsk granted a claim by parents against a school that posted photos of their children on its website without consent. The school was ordered to delete the photos and pay the parents compensation for moral damage. The court unambiguously qualified the actions of the administration as a violation of 152-FZ and the right to the image.
Obtaining informed written consent. This is the mandatory first step. The consent form should be detailed:
Clearly indicate the processing purposes (for the website, for a display, for social media).
Indicate specific types of data (photo, surname and name, class).
Provide the possibility of revoking consent at any time.
It is better to obtain a general consent for the school year with indication of all possible formats than to collect it for each event.
Compliance with the principle of minimum necessity. Do not publish full names along with photos. Allowable: "Students of 3rd "A" class," "The 'Know-alls' team."
Emphasis on group and reportage photos. Courts and regulators are more lenient towards photos where children are taken in a general plan at a school event rather than as targeted portrait subjects. However, this does not cancel the need for consent.
Use of technological measures. On the school website, you can lock the photo section with a password or make it accessible only to internal users (parents, registered under their own accounts).
Interesting fact: In Europe (under the GDPR), data protection for children is even stricter. Consent is required for the processing of personal data of a child under 16 years of age (in some countries, the threshold is reduced to 13 years). Many European schools use special closed platforms (like Seesaw or ClassDojo), where photos and videos are available only to the parents of a specific student after authorization, which minimizes risks.
In addition to legal requirements, there is an ethical side to the issue. The school is a partner of the family in the upbringing of a child. Ignoring the opinion of parents on such a sensitive issue as the publication of their children's images undermines trust. The procedure for obtaining consent is not a bureaucratic formality, but an act of respect for the privacy of the family and the child's right to a safe childhood.
The school director does not have the right to post photos of primary school students (and all minors) on information resources without prior written consent from parents. This is a direct requirement of the Federal Law "On Personal Data" (152-FZ) and the Civil Code of the Russian Federation. Attempts to justify such actions with "school interests" or "absence of a direct prohibition in the charter" are illegal and entail administrative and civil liability.
The legitimate and ethical approach is to build a transparent system of interaction with parents: inform about the image usage policy, obtain detailed consents, respect the right to withdraw such consent, and always put the safety and privacy of the child first. In the digital age, the protection of the student's image is not an obstacle to work, but a basic norm of legal and professional culture of an educational institution.
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