Genealogists use RootsWeb and the incredible power of the
Internet to learn more about ancestors and to find far-flung
cousins. However we are caught in an incongruous position on
privacy matters.
Everyone wants their privacy respected, but are you invading that
of your relatives? Technology enables us to share genealogical
information easily and quickly via e-mail, mailing lists, chat
rooms, bulletin boards, newsgroups, GEDCOMs, CDs and Web sites.
In our eagerness to obtain and to share data we forget that our
living family members have a right to privacy. We also post
personal details about ourselves that we would not put on the
local supermarket bulletin board.
Aunt Martha might reveal her real birth date and confess that she
had a child out of wedlock when she was 19. Sweet old Uncle Jim
may tell you that he has been married and divorced six times.
However, you are invading their privacy if you publish this
information or if you share it with others via a GEDCOM or family
group sheets. Information on home pages, bulletin boards, and
mailing lists is electronic publication. It is OK to collect and
compile information about your living relatives, but don't share
it (unless you have their permission, of course) with others --
in any format via any means.
During the preparation of a talk for my local genealogical
society on this subject, I searched hundreds of genealogy-related
home pages. At one I found the names and details about everyone
in the family, including when and where they were all born, right
down to a one-month-old grandson, listing the hospital in which
he was born.
One researcher reports, "In just one file that I downloaded . . .
I found more than 200 names of persons born within the last 70
years . . ."
Another notes, "I was shocked and dismayed to find that someone
had copied my entire GEDCOM and put it up on their Web site.
While I have no objection to anyone using my dead ancestors, this
person had included the living as well . . ."
Now, I've heard from several genealogists who claim it does not
matter what we put up on our home pages or share on the Internet
since "this information is all public information, anyway."
Another one argues that "unless and until they quit putting
births, deaths and marriages in the newspapers the basic
relationships and names are and will remain public info."
I have no quarrel about marriage and death records -- if they are
really obtained from public sources. However, I asked several
correspondents to provide me with the source of the birth
information posted on their home pages, and guess what I learned?
In every instance the data were either supplied by a cousin or
obtained from a GEDCOM that someone had sent them. In other
words, they had not found the information in a public source at
all.
Take a look at the policy posted at "Don't Mess with the Living,
Texas"
:
"It is the policy of the Texas GenWeb Project to protect
the rights and privacy of our living relatives. We
strongly encourage all involved to do their best not to
place information on the Internet about anyone who is
still living, unless you have their express permission
to do so."
Among the suggestions for ways to protect living family members
are:
-- When requesting information (via e-mail, chat, queries, etc.)
do not include personal information on living persons.
-- When responding to requests for information, especially to
someone you really do not know, do not provide them with
personal information about living persons. They could post
it on the Web or do who knows what else with it.
-- Before sharing GEDCOM files with others, expunge information
on all living persons. Programs such as GEDClean, GEDLiving,
and GEDPrivy will do this for you.
-- If you have a genealogy Web site, remove information about all
living persons. (Check Cyndi's Genealogy Home Page
Construction Kit http://www.cyndislist.com/construc.htm for
tips and links to the several GEDCOM utility programs that
will exclude such data.)
British genealogists are using the "GEN100" logo to signify that
their Web site respects a cut-off date of 100 years, and to
advise that information which is less than 100 years old will not
be divulged. Many Americans use January 1920 as the cut-off
point, since that is the most recent federal census available to
the public.
We should exercise good manners and respect the privacy of our
families -- those generous relatives who have shared information
with us or who shared with a cousin of a cousin. Additionally,
there is another and growing problem -- identity theft. Why make
it easy for cyberthieves to steal your or a loved one's identity?
When you post public messages about your research, it is
sufficient to say you are researching a Cynthia Jones line. You
don't have to reveal relationship by saying she is your mother or
maternal grandmother. To learn more about identity theft and
other privacy issues visit: http://www.identitytheft.org/ and
http://www.privacyrights.org/.
In the pursuit of our ancestors, let's not hurt ourselves or our
living family members. Think before you post or share data.
Written by Myra Vanderpool Gormley, email RWR-editors@rootsweb.com Previously published by RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative,
RootsWeb Review, Vol. 2, No. 12, 24 March 1999. Please visit
RootsWeb's main Web page at rootsweb.com
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This page was last updated on Monday, 29-Oct-2007 09:19:47 MDT
Copyright © 2001 Greg Warren