Another question that has been puzzling me recently --- where do all of the digital Civil War pictures come from? I know of the online collection at the Library of Congress, but that doesn't seem to account for all of those that I see online.
Is there a copyright issue similar to printed works? Some that I see are attributed, generally to the Library of Congress. Many, however, aren't. The numerous Wikipedia articles, particularly the biographies, come to mind. Is it as simple as a right-click, copy and paste? This doesn't seem right. Or are some folks simply not doing the right thing?
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
There are thousands of sources for Civil War era photographs and illustrations online. Between collections like the LoC, US Army, college libraries, museums, individual heirlooms and digitized books, there is a nearly unlimited supply.
If you'd like pointers to a specific source, post again - there are lots of experts out there (here?)!
Copyright? There's a good guide to US law in 'copyright basics' from copyright.gov
Short answer: if it was published before about 1920, it's public domain. A photo or illustration from 1861-65 certainly falls into that category (so does text). Yours for the taking. If more recent than that, copyright law applies, but so does the doctrine of fair use.
FWIW, I ranted about copyright on my blog last year.
Thanks for the comment, Brian. What you said confirms what I was thinking, more or less. I'll be sure to check out the rant this evening.
Post a Comment