Anna --

Copyright issues aside, once anything (images, video, music) is on the internet it is relatively easy for others to appropriate.  To combat that, you can add a watermark (easily done in and on YouTube) and/or lower the quality and resolution of the image/videos.  This will make it harder for someone to reproduce it any larger than what you've uploaded -- but of course your own viewers will have a less pleasant experience as well.

As with everything -- we must balance public accessibility with proprietary museum beliefs.   There has been some great discussions on these issues in the past -- I think it was centering around "Flicker's Commons" if you want to search the archive.

- David -
David Lewis, Curator
Aurora Regional Fire Museum
www.AuroraRegionalFireMuseum.org


-----Original Message-----
From: David Harvey <[log in to unmask]>
To: MUSEUM-L <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thu, Oct 23, 2014 4:31 pm
Subject: Re: [MUSEUM-L] posting historic footage on youtube

Anna,

Copyright belongs to the creator, not the person who owns the physical reel of 
film. Whoever shot the film created it. So, unless all rights were legally 
transferred to your museum in a contract you do not  own the copyright. If you 
own a sculpture by Calder doesn't mean you own the copyright to it. Depending on 
the date of when the footage was shot, it may be under public domain. Usually 
you can assume anything created before 1923 is now under public domain. For more 
info you should read the US copyright office faq.

Cheers!
Dave

David Harvey
Senior Conservator & Museum Consultant
Los Angeles CA. USA
Www.cityofangelsconservation.weebly.com





Sent from my NEC TERRAIN™, a 4G LTE smartphone from AT&T

Anna Rosenbluth <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

>Hello all,
>
>My museum has been digitzing some 16mm film we have in the collection,  and we 
are interested in posting the footage online so members of the community can 
enjoy the old footage and possibly help us identify some of the people featured.  
My concern is that, due to city restrictions,  we can only post video to our 
website using youtube and I am unsure what that means for managing copyright.  
If the footage is online,  especially on YouTube, then it would be easy to steal 
for alternative uses. 
>Is there any advice/opinions on posting videos to YouTube or online in general?
>
>Thanks!
>
>-Anna
>Museum collections specialist
>Campbell Historical Museum and Ainsley House
>[log in to unmask]
>
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