Originally posted by Ally
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On the other hand, people do go to the conference and take photos of people hanging out, or video tapes of the attendees. That's perfectly fine and happens all the time, because those or not the text of presentations and so forth.
The items in the Jack the Ripper exhibit are old and in the public domain. Museums like to try to pretend that they own the copyright on them just because they own the items themselves, but that's not how the law works. Someone else can take a photo of an item that's in the public domain and do with it what they want. The only exception there would be for things like the newly filmed videos being displayed at the exhibition.
It's all pretty simple and basic, Ally, and most people already know this and act that way at conferences and museums without it needing to be explained to them. Don, however, seems to want to try to change copyright laws so they protect anything he has any association with but that they don't protect anything he wants to take from others. I'm not surprised you show up to defend him again, but of course I am surprised that, as a former conference organizer yourself, you wouldn't understand the differences between reproducing copyright materials and just taking photos.
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