Ancestry.com Puts the Cow Back In The Barn (For Now)

[[Final note: read my important third post about this topic, hopefully the last time I will have to comment on it, before you read this one]]

This is the latest episode in the recent drama of cache hijacking and Ancestry.com's Internet Biographical Collection.  Ancestry.com announced this afternoon (August 29th) that they are (at least for now) removing the entire collection

Checking for myself, indeed they have done just that. (Later on the search box itself still existed without a name and it sometimes worked.  Even later on the database with all its links and search ability were indeed completely removed).

Kudos, Ancestry.com with some caveats (comments here addressed TO Ancestry.com or the Generations Network…)

Speaking as someone, who prior to this event, held you in the highest esteem…. when you make a final decision on what to do with the so-called “Internet Biographical Collection,” DO consider more than just what is technically legal and therefore what you can get away with without getting justly sued.

Consider the goodwill of your customers, and your affiliates, and the general genealogical community. They are what make you a success.  Without them you will fail in more ways than just losing money.

I had written and sent an email this morning to NEHGS, that New England organization that I have also been associated with for several years.  The context of the email said: “I can understand NEHGS's wish to ally themselves with a highly-respected genealogy research service in order to provide more active content.  However I might warn you that NEHGS's possible alliance with Ancestry.com is a bit like the fox (Ancestry) going to bed with the chicken (NEHGS).  In the morning, there may only be a few feathers left on your side of the bed.”

I do urge you that in your future decisions and relationships, you will not create a horrifying realization in us that we have gone to bed with the fox.  As an optimistic, non-litigious person, I feel that you did a very good thing today by removing that database. But, as John from Cincinnati said, “I've got my eye on you!”

Janice Brown
Blog: Cow Hampshire

PS: I have also taken the precaution to add a robots.txt file to my blog so that from today, based on current information about Ancestry.com's bots, their bot will not be able to cache or snag any current or future posts.  And as always, this entire article is my OPINION.

*Related Articles*

GeneaBlogie: Blogosphere Science

-Jessica's Genejournal: Believe It Or Not

-kinexxions: Ancestry Removes The Internet Biographical Collection
-kinexxions (followup): Speculation Regarding IBC and Ancestry

-Creative Gene: A Collective Sigh of Relief

-The Genealogue: Caching Trashed

-Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter: Internet Biographical Collection Removed From Ancestry-

-DearMYRTLE: Ancestry Withdraws Offensive Database

-Everton Publishers Genealogy Blog: The Generations Network Continues to Tarnish Their Image-

-Smoky Mountain Family Historian: Challenge

-Transylvanian Dutch: Ancestry Backs Down

-Tracing the Tribe: Cache and Charge, the Ancestry Dilemma

Posted in Current Events, Genealogy, Not New Hampshire | 2 Comments

Ancestry.com Hijacks Cow Hampshire

Yes, it is true.  Ancestry.com has hijacked Cow Hampshire, plus many other genealogy sites that they deemed to be of value to them.

[[**In all fairness to Ancestry.com  there is a follow-up post to this one you may want to read. and also this second follow-up post., and my FINAL post with links to a legal analysis of this controversy].

Despite the very clear copyright notice indicating that my blog MAY NOT be used for “commercial purposes,” Ancestry.com has decided to include the CACHE (older internet copies of my articles) of my blog in their searchable “Internet Biographical Collection,” ONLY available to Deluxe Collection (i.e. paid) subscribers.

You may be thinking, well there are several companies that cache or have copies of internet and blog articles.  Correct you are.  However they do NOT charge anyone to see them.  If you think about it, the electronic CACHE of a web page or a blog page is a COPY of someone’s proprietary information.  If someone printed out web or blog pages, and then charged people to see them, that would be COMMERCIAL USE.  There is NO DIFFERENCE between charging people to view an electronic cache copy, or a paper version.  BOTH clearly violate the COPYRIGHT NOTICE that has been posted on my blog from the first day it was created. (And this copyright notice is also clearly shown on the cached copies they are using in their “database.”)

As much as Ancestry.com charges ME to use their service, they have never asked for my permission to use my electronic documents in their “collection.”

This is how ANCESTRY.COM advertises the subscription-based service:
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Source Information: “Ancestry.com. Internet Biographical Collection  [database on-line].
Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007. Original data:  Biographical info taken from various English web sites. [[NOTE THIS SENTENCE]] See specific website address provided with each entry.

About Internet Biographical Collection This database contains a sampling of biographical sketches found on English language web pages throughout the entire World Wide Web. Web pages can vary greatly in the amount of information they contain about a given person, and in the number of related and unrelated people mentioned on the same page. The information source and the central topic of each page will also vary greatly.

For more information about this database, click here. [link provided in
original]

This database contains a sampling of biographical sketches found on English language web pages throughout the entire World Wide Web. Web pages can vary greatly in the amount of information they contain about a given person, and in the number of related and unrelated people mentioned on the same page. The information source and the central topic of each page will also vary greatly. Given facts should be verified using other sources. One unique and valuable feature of this web-based collection is the number of hyperlinks leading from each page in the collection to other web pages of possible interest on related topics.”
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The problem with the above is:

1) they state that an “address” (technically an address is a URL, not just the name of the site) is provided for the internet source.  This is a lie.  Oh wait, in about four hours of review, I did see ONE source provided for a newspaper listing, probably because they were afraid that the newspaper had enough clout to sue their butt off if they didn’t include the reference.  They did NOT extend the same courtesy to me.

2) When you click on the listing in the database, you go to the cached version of a web site or blog page, and an Ancestry header bar is at the top of the page.  There is an option to “View Web Site” which will take them to my actual blog, but there is also a button to SAVE my cached blog article to the Ancestry subscriber’s “shoebox.”  In other words every time a customer clicks on “save,” they have just sold an electronic copy of one of MY blog articles to one of their customers, for their use.

When I first realized what had happened, I was flattered.  I thought wow, more people will become aware of my blog, which is what I want. (This was my thought process at 1 AM when I was tired and getting ready for bed).  After sleeping on the idea, I was horrified at what they had done.

Perhaps Ancestry.com is such a huge company, they feel they can step on the little guy (or gal in my case). If they felt my articles were of value, surely they could have written to me and asked me if my articles could be included in their “database.”  Possibly they would have even considered paying me some small stipend (like the annual subscription I pay them for the use of their service) as added value to their customers.

They did neither.  Instead they simply hijacked my articles, and thousands of hours of difficult research work, which I have posted here WITH THE EXPRESS INTENT OF IT BEING AVAILABLE FREE OF CHARGE.  Earth to Ancestry…. if I had wanted to CHARGE viewers, I would have done that myself.

As of today, I am removing all references to Ancestry.com from my multiple web sites and blogs.  I hope that if you are an Ancestry affiliate, you will resign from their program in protest,  realizing how destructive it is for a large corporation to tread on the property rights  of the people who spend thousands of hours of their own time to provide it to you for FREE.  Your genealogy blog or web site cache may ALREADY be included in their “database,” and if not, unless stopped, Ancestry may do this any time they choose.  You, and your web site or blog may be next.

[Editor’s note: at the time of this issue,  I urged readers to write to Ancestry.com. Since the matter appears to be settled I have removed their contact info and link].

NOTE: The above article is my OPINION.

ADDENDUM: The genealogy blogs that I have found so far in Ancestry’s database cache (besides my own) include: Begat Chat, The Wide Awake Cafe, Steve’s Genealogy Blog, GeneaBlogie, OakvilleBlackWalnut, Backtrack, Shaking The Tree, Our Family History, Your Brothers Kings, and The Oracle of OMcHodoy.  I’m sure there are others. (kinexxions, )

-RELATED STORIES:-

Family Oral History: Ancestry.com Scrapes Web Sites (THIS IS A MUST READ!)

Ancestry.com Nothing But Theifs [sic Thiefs]

-Cache 22: Has Ancestry.com Gone Too Far?

kinexxions: Is This Use Fair?

-Genea-Musings:Ancestry.com is caching some web site data

-Genealogue:Caching for Cash

Family Matters:More Naughty Than Nice

-AnceStories: Ancestry.com Copyright Violations

-GeneaBlogie: Ancestry.com: Thieves, Hypocrites, Blunderers, or Fair Users?

-Creative Gene: Ancestry.com Stabs Friends in the Back

-Steve’s Genealogy Blog: Thoughts on Ancestry’s Internet Biographical Collection

-Comments about this issue on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter-

-West in New England: Early Morning Genealogy Scraping

DearMYRTLE: Numbers, Ranking & Ancestry.com

-Mississippi History & Genealogy Notes: Ancestry Infuriates Webmasters & Bloggers

-Ancestrally Challenged: Ancestry Has gone TOO Far

ADDITIONAL THOUGHTS
You may be thinking that this issue has nothing to do with you.  You are misinformed.  If you are a genealogist who wants to find FREE online information, without having to cough up the hundreds of dollars it takes to subscribe to Ancestry.com an its affiliates, THIS IS YOUR WAKE UP CALL.  If you want free information to be available, you need to respond to this reply for help, else your only access to free information is going to disappear.

Also, as I understand it, as of this afternoon, (August 28th) Ancestry.com has added the option to view the database in question to THEIR “free” resource listing.  HOWEVER, in order to gain access to this FREE listing you have to register with Ancestry.com.  This means you have to provide information to them, that they can use to send you sales promotions and potentially resell (so, in truth, this is marketing information which is very valuable to them, and although you perceive it to be free as promoted, it actually has a dollar value which they could resell, or at least use to their advantage).  HINT: Ancestry.com… FREE means exactly that… no log-ins, no registrations, no collecting people’s email addresses… do you need a dictionary to understand the word free?

They also now have added late today a link from the description of the search “context” to both “View Cached Version” and “Live Web Page.”  This change is definitely better than what it looked like this morning, however it still bothers me that my blog URL and blog name are not listed in the DESCRIPTION.  I am also deeply grieved that Ancestry.com lists the SOURCE of the “database” to be Ancestry.com which IMPLIES that they have copyright authority, WHICH THEY ABSOLUTELY DO NOT.

And as ALWAYS in my posts on this blog, these words and thoughts are my OPINION.

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ABOUT BOTS and AVOIDING THEM

Several people have written to me about preventing Ancestry.com’s BOT,  from accessing and caching your web site or blog for the first time, or again (if they already have).

Susan at “Family Oral History” has some great suggestions…… just make sure the robots.txt file is in the root or highest directory of your web site.

J

Posted in Current Events, Genealogy, Not New Hampshire | 2 Comments

New Hampshire Slanguage: Puckerbrush

Three Views, No. 1: Mount Washington from Shelburn, New Hampshire John William Hill; watercolor and graphite on off-white wove paper, Gift of J. Henry Hill 1882. The Metropolitan Museum of Art collection.

Three Views, No. 1: Mount Washington from Shelburn, New Hampshire. John William Hill; watercolor and graphite on off-white wove paper, Gift of J. Henry Hill 1882. The Metropolitan Museum of Art collection.

The word “puckerbrush” usually describes an area of land that is mostly composed of scrub-brush. Often land formerly used in farming, left neglected, becomes a thriving place for invasive species such as poison ivy, sumac, and buckthorn.

A second meaning of the word describes any incidence when a person is lost, or away from their normal understanding.  It can describe a real, or imagined place.  [For example, “He is out in the puckerbrush.”]

The “One Look Dictionary” calls it “colloquial speech of Carleton County, New Brunswick, Canada.”  However, this term was used in the manner described above in Maine, New Hampshire, and probably other locations in New England.  Whether New Englanders brought the word to Canada, or vice versa, is unknown.

Apparently this term is still used in Maine, as a hunting and fishing guide service in Machias ME calls itself the “Puckerbrush Guide Service.”  Puckerbrush Press, and the Puckerbrush Review, were both born in Maine.

You can find the term in literature. In “Tales of a Vanishing River,” Earl Howell Reed describes a character he calls, “Puckerbrush Bill.”  A possible explanation is that although Earl was born and raised in Illinois, his mother was from Maine and possibly taught him the word.

Janice

[Editor’s note: this post was updated 26 October 2014]

Posted in New Hampshire Slanguage | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

New Hampshire Genealogy: The Legend of the Irish Drummer Boy

Many of us have stories passed down from our parents or grandparents that are partly based in truth, but are partly out in the puckerbrush. All I can say is, “Me too!”

One oft-repeated story involves my maternal great-grandfather, J.P. Ryan. My mother, the person who told ME the story, only knew her grandfather until she was ten years old (when he died).  She would have sworn on a stack of bibles that she was relaying the entire truth.

As the story goes “an impoverished young Irish lad fled his native land of Ireland to avoid starvation.  Arriving in the United States, he lived in Vermont. He served during the Civil War at the tender age of 14, being a drummer boy.  His name was J.P. Ryan, and he stood over 6 feet tall.”

And so based on this story, a then-naive young 23 year old (me) began her research into the life of her great grandfather.  It took me twenty years to sort it entirely out, probably because I believed my mother’s version of the truth. Using a variety of resources including census records, town records (Jay, Vermont), and vital records, an entirely different picture evolved. And so if there is any advice I might give to other researchers in the same position–“Don’t believe anything you hear and only half of what you see.”

My first shock was to learn that J.P. Ryan’s name was originally Patrick, and not the moniker “John Patrick,” that my uncle, brother and several cousins has been given to honor him.  His parents called him Patrick in both the 1850 and 1860 censuses, on his marriage record, on his children’s birth records, and on land/deed records. He arrived in the United States around the age of 10 with his parents and family. They weren’t exactly destitute, as early on they were buying and selling large portions of real estate, and Patrick’s father was selectman of the town where they lived (an honor usually reserved for someone with money and influence).

In 1860 Patrick (at the age of 21) was single and still living with his parents, and several siblings in Jay, Vermont.  Hmm… ok… the Civil War began in 1861 and ended in 1865.  This blows the “enlisted at the age of 14” statement clearly out of the water. But Patrick’s (or J.P.’s) tombstone indicated he was a Civil War veteran, so I figured that part was probably true. I set about to find his enlistment papers.

Between the various names he may have used to enlist, I researched “Patrick,” “John,” “John P.,” and “Patrick J.,” Ryans who had enlisted from Vermont. But I could not conclusively determine which of these were “my” Patrick.  At the time it was just too expensive for me to send away for the National Archvies documents for ALL of them, and so I kept looking for more clues.

Patrick’s death record was unremarkable, but in discussing it with my mother, she indicated that at the time he had been on leave from the Old Soldier’s Home in Tilton, New Hampshire. This was exciting news. I sent an inquiry to the Home and quickly received notice that a man named Jackson P. Ryan had indeed stayed there–his birth date and death date matched Patrick’s exactly.  They also provided information on his military enlistment.

Jackson P. Ryan!! Surely this was a mistake.  I brought this name to my mother’s attention, who offhandedly said, “Oh yes, my grandfather LIKED that name.”   To which I replied, “Well mom, apparently he liked it so much, he USED it!”  To this day I have no clue WHY he chose an alias, but it does explain the J.P. initials he used later in his life.  At the same time he preferred the nickname of “Jack,” probably short for his adopted Jackson moniker. Relatives around him thought Jack was short for John, and thus erroneously named their children.

J.P. Ryan at Straws Point, New Hampshire

J.P. Ryan at Straws Point, New Hampshire

Jackson P. Ryan, age 22, enlisted on 18 September 1862 in Company H of the 15th Vermont Infantry, with the rank of Eighth Corporal.   He mustered out 5 August 1863 at Brattleboro VT.

Oh, and he may have looked really tall to a short ten year old, but his Civil War enlistment papers show he stood 5 feet 10 inches tall.

Janice

PS: This story connects to New Hampshire genealogy.  Several of J.P. Ryan’s daughters moved first to Nashua, and then to the Greater Manchester (NH) area between 1900 and 1910.  His daughter Addie (my grandmother) married and had 13 children, 10 of whom lived to adulthood, and who grew up in Manchester.  Hundreds of her descendants survive, many of them still in New Hampshire.  The photograph above shows my mother, Mary Manning with her grandfather, J.P. Ryan, circa 1924.

This article was written for the .31st Carnival of Genealogy. with the topic “Confirm or Debunk: Family Myths, Legends, and Lore,” hosted by Craig Manson at GeneaBlogie. Stop on over and read some amazing family stories.

Posted in Carnivals and Memes, Genealogy, Irish in New Hampshire, Not New Hampshire | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Newton New Hampshire’s Social Worker and UFO Abductee: Eunice Elizabeth "Betty" (Barrett) Stewart Hill (1919-2004)

On a late summer evening on 19 September 1961, Barney and Betty Hill were driving through Franconia Notch in New Hampshire, and reportedly saw an unusual light in the sky, and were subsequently abducted by aliens.


Betty and her husband Barney did not seek out publicity, but when a reporter leaked information about their encounter in 1965, they received international attention. Continue reading

Posted in New Hampshire Women, Oddities, Accidents and Crazy Weather | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments