MESSAGE
DATE | 2002-09-08 |
FROM | Jay Sulzberger
|
SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] ALT-Q Ellis Island (fwd)
|
Maybe the folks who run Ellis Island should change the inscription on the Statue of Liberty to "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses -- but not a Web site that does a better job than ours."
Ellis Island is not only part of the American story, but for many Americans it's also a piece of family history. In April 2001, the Statue of Liberty- Ellis Island Foundation, the private foundation founded by Lee Iacocca, put ship manifests and immigration arrival records on its Web site. That database - 22 million arrival records from between 1892 and 1924 - made things easier for those interested in researching their family history, and the site was immediately swamped with visitors.
But as is often the case on the Internet, an individual upstart found a way to improve on the mainstream, big-budget product. Stephen Morse, 62, a computer engineer from California, created a simplified search form that allowed researchers to search through the Ellis Island records all at once, starting from a Web site that he created. Mr. Morse's Web site became well known in the world of genealogy, and was mentioned in articles in the New York Times and the Jerusalem Post. But now it's been shut down because of a dispute between Mr. Morse and the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation. The organization claims that Mr. Morse's Web site infringed upon the foundation's legal and proprietary rights and was in violation of the Ellis Island Database terms of usage. The director of public affairs for the foundation, Peg Zitko, said that instead of suing Mr. Morse, the foundation would prefer to come to a fair resolution and incorporate Mr. Morse's tools onto the foundation's own Web site. ''What he created was a good thing,'' she said.
Mr. Morse's Web site used name per mutations and a Soundex system - taking names that sound alike - to filter the Ellis Island records. The site also gave users with Jewish ancestry the ability to pull up lists of names from towns their relatives immigrated from. Mr. Morse was in the process of creating a form to provide that kind of information for all ethnicities.
A genealogist in West Virginia who often used Mr. Morse's Web site, Megan Smolenyak, praised its speed and simplicity.
''It's really instant gratification,'' she said. Eliminating it ''would be a real Ioss for those of us who have an Ellis Island past,'' she said.
Mr. Morse received a contract on Saturday from the Ellis Island Foundation, but he refused to sign it. _
The contract, which sought to use Mr.Morse as a consultant for better ing the Ellis Island Data Base using the tools that he had created, also 'states that Mr. Morse had performed illegal activity, said a genealogist familiar with the dispute, David Fox. Mr. Fox is coordinator of the Belarus Special Interest Group, a group that traces Jewish ancestry in Belarus.
"The agreement wanted him to admit to some illegal activity. That's why he won't sign the agreement," Mr. Fox said, adding that he thinks. Morse would agree to be a consultant as Long as he doesn't have to state he broke the law.
Mr. Morse would not comment on the negotiations or the terms of the contract; neither would the spokeswoman for the foundation.
For now, Mr. Morse has voluntarily shut down the Web site to avoid the Iegal hassle, Mr. Fox said.
The foundation spokeswoman, Ms. Zitko, said the foundation was surprised that Mr. Morse shut down the Site. "He did that of his own volition," Ms. Zitko said.
In the meantime, genealogist across the nation are worried about the shutdown and are hoping for a resolution soon.
Ms. Smolenyak said she was "bombarded" by about 50 e-mails about the shut-down during the weekend. "Let's just say, it was definitely a concern in the genealogy community," she said. LocalWords: plified Morse's Zitko resolu tion Soundex Megan Smolenyak Ioss
____________________________ New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless....
|
|