Posted
by: Alejandro Rojas - January 30, 2015
The
news was ablaze with the story of files regarding the
U.S. Air Forces investigation into the UFO phenomenon
being posted online at The Black Vault website. Most news
outlets neglected to report that these files were not
new to the internet, but that what was new was that they
were in a PDF format, and much more accessible than they
had been previously.
Regardless,
interest in the files soared, and many local media outlets
combed the files for UFO cases in their neck of the woods.
This spawned many stories about UFO sightings the U.S.
Air Force took an interest in when they were officially
investigating UFOs from the late 40s to the late 60s.
However,
now, unfortunately, the files at The Back Vault have been
forced to be taken down. Fold3, a site that posts military
files and is a subsidiary to Ancestry.com, has claimed
they have a digital copyright over the files.
John
Greenewald, owner of The Black Vault, has sent out this
statement:
The
Black Vaults Statement on the Project Blue Book
Files
January
29th, 2015 It is with great frustration to announce,
that Ancestry.com, and their subsidiary Fold3, has laid
down a claim to copyright on the Project Blue Book material
which has long been labeled as public domain
by the National Archives & Records Administration
(NARA). Ancestry.com is claiming ownership to the digital
version of this material despite me having records
that Fold3 doesnt even have in their archive and
I received under the FOIA starting back in 1996. They
simply claimed it was 100% theirs and I was forced to
remove it.
Because
of my attempt with properly crediting Fold3 with a DIRECT
LINK to their site as partial credit for some of the material,
they used that show of proper credit by me to issue a
copyright claim under the Digital Copyright Millennium
Act (DCMA). Anyone who knows anything about the law can
attest; you are guilty until proven innocent
so this was the beginning of the end. I never hid from
Fold3 as a source, and even brought them up in some media
interviews I did take part in, which were all cut out.
No one cared about that part of the story this
new archive was what they wanted to report on because
it was simple, straight forward, easy and free. And people
loved it.
Based
on an evidence-less claim I was forced to remove the entire
site. Thats right, there was ZERO evidence submitted
to my web hosting provider of ownership or copyright or
license, but rather, they simply placed the accusation
which is all it takes.
In
good faith, I took the site down in hopes a compromise
could be reached. They already had credit given on the
front page of the site for some of the material, and that
link alone resulted in a 12%+ increase in their entire
statistics since they posted records in 2007, and my link
multiplied their weekly hits by 10x, yes ten times, in
only 5 days (statistics are posted on their page, so I
am not guessing on those statistics but rather took notes).
I
stated there was much more information here than is cited
to Fold3, but they didnt care. I offered giving
them a full 100% share of voice banner ad
to advertise Fold3 (in addition to the link already driving
them traffic), or to sell ads with no profit share to
me, and they didnt care. I asked if they would work
with me on any capacity, because CLEARLY interest was
being generated by my audience (and obviously not by theirs)
but they didnt care.
In
the end they offered I become a member of their
affiliate program and offer a link to them in exchange
for a portion of sales generated. ie: You have to sign
up with them, pay a membership, and they give me a percentage.
I quickly declined.
This
is public record material, and it should remain so. To
lay exclusive claim to it in the digital world,
when both sites (my site and theirs) offer it for free
is ludicrous and a waste of time and money for
everyone.
But
at the end of the day, I am proud to have brought attention
to information that although has been available for quite
some time the public at large never knew it existed.
I will let Google Trends prove my point. Here is the popularity
of Project Blue Book, since 2005, and a graph relating
to people searching for information on it.
See
that spike? Yes, The Black Vault did that
and I
am proud to be the one who caused such an uproar of interest
by the public and the media (despite some erroneous facts
in the reporting).
Did
some media outlets misreport? Yes, and if this page was
still up, there was a message on the front page setting
the record straight.
But,
call it corporate greed, a legal loophole, or a grey area
in the copyright law, all of that is gone in the name
of getting your personal information, and your credit
card, by a corporation that has a wallet much thicker
than mine. Ill let you decide what the right label
is to put on this entire mess.
Does
all of this upset you? Me too! And I invite you to express
your thoughts to Ancestry.com, Fold3, and anyone else
youd like to express your disappointment:
Fold3
355 South 520 West
Suite 250
Lindon, UT 84042
Ph 1-800-613-0181
support@fold3.com
Ancestry
Inc. Corporate Headquarters
360 West 4800 North
Provo, UT 84604
Ph 801-705-7000
Fx 801-705-7001
support@ancestry.com
In
18+ years, Ive never seen anything like this, and
it is a sad day for the world of public domain, public
information, public record and the idea of Freedom
of Information.
I
have vowed from day 1, never to fall into the pit of desire
of placing a price tag on PUBLIC information. Its
a shame I am very much alone in that belief.
Sincerely,
John
Greenewald, Jr.
The Black Vault
http://www.theblackvault.com