Genealogy Chat
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Copyright of images
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:15 |
I was wondering where copyright comes into play on images which are sent via pm. |
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Gai | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:22 |
Very interesting point, TootyFruity. |
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DazedConfused | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:24 |
Not too sure about BMD's but I believe it is ok to post the middle bit (the most important part) but you are not allowed to post the whole certificate as the style is copyrighted. |
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RolloTheRed | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:31 |
All GRO certs are crown copyright and "may not be reproduced without permission". However there is also the exception for "study and comment" which would cover people sharing certs etc - cert copies and census pages are often put up on Ancestry without any problems. |
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:36 |
When I looking to it for our page it became apparent that all images are protected via crown copyright. This means that they can be used for personal use only. I know this as I have it in writing from the National Archives at the start of the process of gaining copyright permissions. |
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Janet | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:37 |
As I understood it its ok as long as you are not using it to prove date of birth /marriage etc |
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:56 |
As Piglet Pals says you can snip the relevant bit which does not infringe the copyright and I doubt that any prosecutions will ever be brought as there are so many images on family trees in the public domain on Ancestry it would cost to much to prosecute everyone. |
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Kense | Report | 2 Jun 2013 11:59 |
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/information-management/copying-bmd-certificates.pdf |
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 12:16 |
KenSe we posted that on our page and I used that when approaching the relevant authorities and was told that as long as they are for personal use that is fine but putting them on a public site i.e. our facebook page required written permission from the Chief Registrar of England and Wales for BMD's, permission from the National Archive and separate permission for Scotland. Initially, I was turned down and had to go further. It took several months to sort out completely. |
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Kense | Report | 2 Jun 2013 14:21 |
That's interesting to know TootyFruity. I have considered putting mine on my tree but have never been quite sure that it is allowed, in spite of that document. |
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Kense | Report | 2 Jun 2013 14:32 |
Incidentally I believe that anything you put on Facebook gives them (Facebook) the right to use without reference to you. |
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jax | Report | 2 Jun 2013 14:54 |
I know this is not the same thing but:- |
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 15:30 |
KenSe Each Department has been given a link to the facebook page I manage with some friends and checked out what we were doing with the images. Scotland's people where particularly thorough but in the end all were happy with our page. Facebook T & C's do say that they can use anything we post on that page without our consent but I'm guessing if they use one of our images of say a certificate then they are breaching crown copyright and it would be up to the government to pursue this. |
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Malcolm | Report | 2 Jun 2013 16:12 |
I would say that it was a breach of copyright to reveal (copy) an image to any third party. However it would be a serious breach if you were to do this for profit. I think that's the point, to stop people from profiting from other people's work or investment. Common sense really. |
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GenealogyResearchAssistance | Report | 2 Jun 2013 16:49 |
Malcolm as I understand the copyright in the instance of documents covered by the crown copyright is that it is ok to add them to your tree but not to copy or for someone else to copy them or sell to a third party without a license from the Chief Registrar's Office or the National Archives. I suppose because it is taking potential income away from the crown. BMD at one point never had Crown Copyright printed on them and this is a relatively new thing but every certificate now produced is covered by it. I'm uncertain about the law as I'd have to read up on Crown Copyright as it relates to copyright law and I'm not going to do so as I already have the bits of paper allowing the Admins on our page to reproduce the images covered by this particular copyright. (A little long winded but hopefully everyone will get the gist) |
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RolloTheRed | Report | 3 Jun 2013 13:49 |
Crown copyright is not perpetual and is subject to rules. |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 3 Jun 2013 17:30 |
It is all rather academic. |