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On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 18:47:01 +0100, "Thierry" To answer me in private
use http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/post.htm wrote: Hi, This short message to tell you that I published a short history of amateur radio, 10 pages illustrated... http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/qsl-ham-history.htm Hi Thierry, You obviously spend a lot of time on your web site, and are trying to add content, which is good. Most web sites don't have much content. I'd like to offer a suggestion, and I hope you take it the right way. Adding original content to an already overflowing Internet isn't an easy job. There is a lot of duplication on the Internet, and a lot of people assemble entire web sites that are simply a duplication of what someone else has already done. An example is AC6V's site, which I'm sure Rod can verify has been ripped off link per link several times over the years. This problem has grown so much in the last few years that there are companies using web spiders (robots) that constantly scan the Internet looking for copyright and trademark violations. We even have TurnItIn bot helping educational institutions prevent plagiarism on student papers. (http://www.turnitin.com) You have to be careful about what you 'borrow' from other web sites because you never know if the web site you borrow it from may have borrowed it previously from someone else without permission. Many people are under the mistaken impression that if Google Images or PSearch has an image indexed, it's OK to use it. I don't know where you got the picture of Edmund B. Durham on your page at http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry/qsl-ham-history2.htm but the same picture appears on another web site at http://www.sparkmuseum.com/DURHAM.HTM and that web site has a copyright notice which reads "Unless otherwise noted, all images and content are copyright John D. Jenkins. Use without the written permission of the owner is forbidden." Anyway, the point is that some people take copyright violations very seriously, and to protect yourself you should be very careful about what you use - on the Internet, the source you get it from may not be the original source. As we've seen from your exercise in radio history, the Internet is already full of web sites about radio history. As you add content to your web site, try and make it original content - that's what makes your web site unique and interests people in coming to see it. 73, Jim KH2D |
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