Thanks, Britt and Frank - this is pretty much what my understanding was, but good to have it confirmed. On the same lines - what about satellite imagery used to drape over terrain models? Does that need to be credited? Cindy ---- Britt Griswold <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Cindy, > > Most Federal government material is free of copyright concerns, if it > was paid for by the US taxpayer. However not all material handed out by > Government is Government produced/paid, so one must be careful about > sourcing the material. > > If you have images of NASA installations and machines, pulled from > government sources, with no other credits than NASA attached, then you > are on pretty Solid Ground. However, even NASA asks for a photo > credit. If you have done an image that is not an exact copy of a NASA > photo, you can tell the editor to not worry. If you have done an exact > copy of the view in the photo, then there may be some concern about > crediting the source material, but not a copyright issue. It might be a > bit of a gray area on what is appropriate. After all, some other > textbook company could use the same source material and produce an > identical image without impinging on your textbook company's copyright. > > You might point out that textbooks reproduce images from NASA all the > time for publication. They do give credit however. But if you are > combining these images into a new picture, and there are no copyrights, > then the concern about credits becomes less and less. At some point it > becomes fair use. And at some point if you create an image that as a > whole is unique new creation, it has enforceable copyright. > > It could be your editor wants a satellite and dish that is realistic > looking but in the details is not something that exists. But that opens > the possibility of creating something that could not exist and will not > work, then it is sci-fi. Another grey area to worry about. > > Britt > > > Cindy Shaw wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I'm doing some Earth science textbook work, and have to do an illustration that incorporates a space satellite and a satellite dish on the ground. For both, I used NASA photos as reference. The client seems to be very picky about having things appear "realistic" - so I even took pains to make sure the satellite itself was appropriate for the content. > > > > The comments from the editor came back asking if I had "traced" photos for the satellite and dish (I did not) - but they do look realistic, which is what the client wants. She said that "tracing photos" is not allowed due to copyright issues. > > > > My understanding is that government stuff, like NASA, NOAA, etc. - is in the public domain - so even if I HAD traced them, I would have been OK in doing so, as long as the finished product does not duplicate the photo. But even if I did want the object to look like the photo, I would be OK in making it look like the photographed object. > > > > Is my understanding correct on this? What IS the policy on using govt photos as reference. Are they indeed public domain? What if I did want to use an element that was part of a govt. photo in an illustration? Could I do so? > > > > Thanks much, > > Cindy > > > > > > > -- > _______________________________________ > Britt Griswold/WMAP Project > TRAX/Maslow Media Group > NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center > Code 665 Bldg. 21 Rm 063 > Greenbelt, MD 20771-0001 > (301) 286-3381 > (301) 286-1617 FAX > (301) 286-7230 FAX > [log in to unmask] > http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov