Some people eat, sleep and chew gum, I do genealogy and write...

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Protecting Trust in Historical Images from the Coalition for Responsible AI in Genealogy


 https://craigen.org/protecting-trust-in-historical-images/

Let's say you are now on FamilySearch.org looking at your part of the FamilyTree and discover that someone has posted a Memory of a "photo" of your great-great-great grandmother who died in 1834. You begin to wonder where this image came from. Obviously, with the now not-so-new availability almost anyone can ask for generated images from dozens, perhaps hundreds, of online apps including such well-known apps such as Photoshop, ChatGPT, and many others. 

Here is a sample image generated from Adobe Firefly.


I should hope my ancestors were rich enough to look like this. Anyway, it might help to note that photography, especially color photography, did not exist in the 1700s. However, anyone can totally disreagard historical accuracy and generate almost anything you can imagine. Because of what is happening in the AI world of image and video generation, the Coalition for Responsible AI in Genealogy (CRAIGEN.org) has been working on establishing some basic principles for using generated images and for using AI in general. If you are a genealogist and have any idea of the historical problems arising from the improper use of AI not only to generate images but also to alter historical images, documents and artifacts, you should click on the link to the website and review the Guiding Principles and Statements. You might also want to read some of the Education articles. We will be posting more information and articles as well as writing blog posts and doing videos on thes subjects raised on the website. 


Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Understanding FamilySearch GEDCOM Updated


 https://gedcom.io/

GEDCOM stands for GEnealogical Data Communication and is a file format for exchanging family tree data between different genealogy software programs. It acts as a universal translator, allowing users to export their family history data from one application and import it into another, ensuring compatibility and data transfer without losing information like names, dates, and relationships. GEDCOM files can also serve as a backup for your research.  See https://www.familysearch.org/en/gedcom/

The original GEDCOM specification was released in 1984, and the last update to it was version 5.5 in 1996 with an incremental upgrade to version 5.5.1 released in 2019. The latest version of the GEDCOM specification is FamilySearch GEDCOM 7.0, which was first released in May 2021. The most recent minor release is version 7.0.16, dated March 18, 2025. See https://gedcom.io/about/

Key features of version 7.0 include:

  • Modern character encoding, requiring UTF-8 throughout, which better supports international character sets.
  • Improved multimedia handling through "GEDZip," a standard zip format that packages genealogical data with associated photos and other files.
  • Expanded and more versatile notes with support for text styling and formatting.
  • Removal of ambiguities present in the previous standard, GEDCOM 5.5.1.
  • Introduction of semantic versioning and a public GitHub repository to manage maintenance and future development.
What is the difference between the FamilySearch GEDCOM standard and an app or program?

FamilySearch GEDCOM is a standard file format for storing and exchanging genealogical data. It is a text-based file (with a .ged or .gdz extension) that uses specific tags and structure to define genealogical information (names, dates, places, relationships, sources, etc.). Think of GEDCOM as the universal language for family trees.  Its primary purpose is to enable the exchange and transfer of family tree data between different genealogy software programs and websites. It ensures that data exported from one system can be understood and imported by another. FamilySearch developed the original GEDCOM standard and continues to steward new versions (like the current FamilySearch GEDCOM 7.0) to improve compatibility and add new features, such as the ability to package associated media files. 

FamilySearch GEDZip is an added feature of the FamilySearch GEDCOM specification. A standard zip archive file is formatted to combine existing Family Tree data with external images and other files. The FamilySearch GEDZip file can be unzipped after transfer, making the genealogical data and associated external files available together in a different software product. The exact procedures for importing or exporting files will vary according to the individual software product’s implementation of the FamilySearch GEDCOM specification. See GEDCOM 7.0 FAQ

A genealogy app or program (such as RootsMagic, Family Tree Maker, Ancestry, etc.) is the software application you use to build, view, manage, and analyze your family tree data. This is the tool with the graphical user interface (GUI) that allows you to input, edit, visualize, and generate reports from your family data. See https://www.sog.org.uk/education/learning-hub/guides-tips/family-history-software/

Apps offer features that the simple GEDCOM file does not, such as robust data entry forms, complex chart generation, direct searching of online record databases, image management, synchronization features, and advanced reporting. Genealogy programs rely on the GEDCOM standard to export your family tree data into a transportable file and to import data from other users or sites. While a program's internal database may store more proprietary information or structure the data differently, the GEDCOM file acts as the standard interchange layer. See What is a GEDCOM file?

If you are a programmer or a developer, you can participate in the ongoing discussion about the development of future releases of the FamilySearch GEDCOM standard at FamilySearch/GEDCOM

Note: The FamilySearch GEDCOM Steering Committee is the group that manages and guides the evolution of the FamilySearch GEDCOM standard, meeting regularly to discuss issues and pull requests for the project's repositories. Their role is similar to other steering committees: they help align the standard with its objectives, resolve conflicts and issues that arise, and make decisions about its future direction, ensuring it continues to be a practical data structure for exchanging genealogical information. See GEDCOM Steering Committee 

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Expanded links on FamilySearch.org


FamilySearch.org

When you scroll down to the bottom of the FamilySearch.org website's you will see the following list of links. 


The "Site Map" link is an outline of the main parts of the website. I doubt that many of my readers ever looked at or used the Site Map. Here is a screen shot of the Site Map. 


You might was to spend some time clicking around on the Site Map. You may have some surprises. 

Now, by clicking on the More arrow that I have outlined above in red, at the bottom of some of the pages on the FamilySearch.org website, you can now see this expanded list of links to topics including links to other websites.  The new list does not have a name, but it contains even more helpful links. The list is above at the beginning of this post.

I suggest that you might want to familiarize yourself with each of the links. You might be additionally surprised at what is now found there. The list is also different for those who are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and those who are not and/or are not registered on the website. You might also note that some of the links are the same between the two lists. You might also view some of the items in both lists that can act as shortcuts to some of the lesser used features of the website. 

Have some fun clicking around.

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Why are you stressing over an end-of-line?

 


It is a fact of life that all your ancestral lines ultimately end. You can call these a "brick wall" if you are actively trying to extend the line but in some cases, they are really an end-of-line. There many reasons why the ancestral lines might end. Large family tree programs such as FamilySearch.org's Family Tree give you a graphic representation of these end of lines and are a constant reminder that you are not "finished" with your research. To get some idea of the reality of these challenges, here are a few reasons for these "end-of-line" situations:

1. The Record Doesn't Exist (or Survive) 

The primary reason a line ends is simple: the necessary record was never created or has been lost to history.

Pre-Standardization: Before the 17th or 18th centuries, government and church record-keeping was inconsistent, especially for common people. If an ancestor didn't own land, pay taxes, or belong to a major institution, they often weren't formally documented.

Destruction: Fires, floods, wars, and simple neglect have destroyed countless documents over centuries. A single fire at a county courthouse can wipe out decades of records, halting every single line that passes through that county.

2. Identity is Fluid 

We rely on stable surnames, but this is a modern concept. In the past, identity could be inconsistent.

Patronymics: In many cultures, the surname changed with every generation (e.g., Sven's son became a new surname), breaking the continuity of the family name we rely on.

Spelling: Low literacy meant clerks spelled names phonetically and variably (e.g., "Smythe," "Smith," "Smyth"). It becomes impossible to prove two differently spelled names refer to the same person without a clear confirming document.

3. The Maiden Name Barrier 

This is the most frequent wall. Historically, records centered on the male head of household.

Once a woman married, her legal identity merged with her husband's, and her crucial birth surname (maiden name) was often omitted from census, death, and probate records.

If you can't find the original marriage record that lists her maiden name, you lose the key needed to unlock her parents and the previous generation, effectively ending that branch of the tree.

This list could go on and on but the ultimate reality is that surviving and accessible documentation ceases to exist. 

Over the many years that I have been involved in the genealogical community, one of the tragedies I frequently observe is when researchers fixate on a single end-of-line.  As the time spent on these unobtainable goals, the stress caused by these repeated searches may even cause a dedicated genealogist to give up research altogether. 

The reality of this situation is that the number of your ancestors is exponential. Overly focusing on one ancestor is literally a waste of time. 

In American history, the majority of all people arriving in the American colonies between 1620 and the mid-1700s were non-free, arriving either as enslaved people, indentured servants, or transported convicts. Historians estimate that between 50% and 75% of all immigrants during the colonial period—both European and African—arrived without full freedom. See the following citations.

“Digital History.” Accessed October 30, 2025. https://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/disp_textbook.cfm?smtid=2&psid=449.
Ruymbeke, Bertrand Van. “North America: Migrations and Settlement, c. 1600–c. 1810.” In The Cambridge History of Global Migrations: Volume 1: Migrations, 1400–1800, edited by Cátia Antunes and Eric Tagliacozzo, vol. 1. The Cambridge History of Global Migrations. Cambridge University Press, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108767095.032.
Salmon, Emily Jones. “Convict Labor during the Colonial Period.” Encyclopedia Virginia, n.d. Accessed October 30, 2025. https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/convict-labor-during-the-colonial-period/.
“Stories of Diversity in Colonial Massachusetts.” Accessed October 30, 2025. https://www.sec.state.ma.us/divisions/commonwealth-museum/exhibits/online/diversity-colonial-massachusetts/diversity-colonial-massachusetts-7.htm.
Wikipedia. “Indentured servitude in British America.” October 27, 2025. https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indentured_servitude_in_British_America&oldid=1319051390.

There are many more sources. This is only one reason why your ancestor might have magically appeared in America or some where else.

Many, if not most, of the people who fall into these categories have almost no history to research. DNA testing can sometimes give a lead into further research, but sometimes the DNA results are inconclusive. 

If you find yourself in this situation, you may wish to start researching other people. Stressing over this reality is futile. Take some time to learn about your other ancestors. 

Now, before you decide I don't know what I am writing about, if your ancestral lines ends with you or your parents, i would suggest a DNA test and at least one family tree on a major genealogical website or even more than one with a family tree. This is one of the best ways to get started. 

Friday, October 24, 2025

Can AI Images and Text Ever Be U.S. Copyright Protected?

generate an image representing copyright

NOTE: For years, I have either been using my own images or public domain images from the internet. Since the ruling in Thaler v. Perlmutter, No. 23-5233 (D.C. Cir. March 18, 2025). https://media.cadc.uscourts.gov/opinions/docs/2025/03/23-5233.pdf I have been using generated images because of the time it takes me to find officially public domain images and the large number of websites that stick a copyright claim on public domain images. 


This case established that an artwork created entirely by an artificial intelligence system, which Dr. Stephen Thaler called the "Creativity Machine," cannot be registered for a copyright because the Copyright Act of 1976 requires a human being to be the author. The opinion was issued on March 18, 2025 (Thaler v. Perlmutter, 2025). Dr. Thaler has since filed a Petition for a Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court, asking the Court to take the case, but the Supreme Court has not yet issued a decision or a denial.

Here is the actual wording of the case:

We affirm the denial of Dr. Thaler’s copyright application.  The Creativity Machine cannot be the recognized author of a copyrighted work because the Copyright Act of 1976 requires all eligible work to be authored in the first instance by a human being.  Given that holding, we need not address the Copyright Office’s argument that the Constitution itself requires human authorship of all copyrighted material.  Nor do we reach Dr. Thaler’s argument that he is the work’s author by virtue of making and using the Creativity Machine because that argument was waived before the agency. 

Granted that the Supreme Court could modify or reverse the district court's ruling but given the quantity of internet or generated slop (like my image above) I doubt that the Supreme Court will allow all or even most of it to copyright protected. There is also another major issue. The generative ability of tools such as Photoshop using Nano Banana achieve resolution and quality that makes identifying generated images extremely difficult. In addition, there is the whole genre of "illustration" where the quality and use of the images does not warrant preservation or ownership. 

Of course the argument that my prompt "created" the image above but that is a weak legal argument. It is not the causation of image event that determines the exact content of generated images. Here is another image generated using exactly the same prompt. The first image above was generated by Google Gemini. This image was generated by Adobe Firefly. By the way, the Gemini image is watermarked (the icon in the lower right hand corner). Here is the prompt: generate an image representing copyright.


Generated images from Adobe Firefly are watermarked, but whether you see a visible watermark depends on your subscription: Free users will have a visible Adobe Firefly watermark on their downloaded or exported images. Paid subscribers (such as those with a Firefly Premium or Adobe Express Premium plan) can download their creations without the visible watermark. Regardless of the user's plan, Adobe also automatically applies Content Credentials—invisible metadata that confirms the image was created using Adobe Firefly, promoting transparency about its AI origin.

So, what about the question in the title to this post? Presently, U.S. copyright law does not automatically impose a copyright on all works. For a work to be protected by copyright, it must meet three fundamental criteria:

  • Originality: It must be an independent creation of the author and possess at least a minimal degree of creativity.
  • Authorship: It must be created by a human author (works created solely by nature or by AI without human input are generally not copyrightable).
  • Fixation: It must be "fixed in a tangible medium of expression." This means it must be captured in a form that can be perceived, reproduced, or communicated (e.g., written down, recorded, saved as a digital file).
There is no requirement that the work be identified as copyright protected such as using the copyright symbol above. However, other countries, besides the U.S., may impose different requirements. 

For the time being, we await the Supreme Court's ruling in the Thaler case. 

Thursday, October 23, 2025

What's New with MyHeritage Fall 2025

 

https://blog.myheritage.com/2025/10/myheritage-upgrades-its-dna-tests-to-whole-genome-sequencing/

MyHeritag.com has been busy the past few weeks. The major announcement was the release of an upgraded DNA test to use Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS). Here is a summary of the content of the announcement from the blog post, "MyHeritage Upgrades Its DNA Tests to Whole Genome Sequencing."

  • MyHeritage has announced a major upgrade to its DNA testing, transitioning from the traditional genotyping array technology to Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS). This move makes them the first major consumer DNA testing company to adopt this comprehensive method on a large scale.
  • Previously, MyHeritage's tests examined about 700,000 base pairs of DNA; now, using WGS, they read virtually the entire human genome, about 3 billion base pairs. They achieve this efficiently through a technique called low-pass sequencing with 2x coverage, which, when combined with a statistical method known as imputation, is both highly accurate for genealogy and affordable for customers.
  • The primary benefit for users will be greater accuracy in both DNA Matches and Ethnicity Estimates. Furthermore, this foundation will allow MyHeritage to develop new and exciting genetic genealogy products in the future. Importantly, this significant technological leap comes at no additional cost to consumers and is implemented with the same strict standards for privacy and data security.
  • The rollout is already underway, with WGS being used for most new MyHeritage DNA kits and set to become the exclusive processing method by the end of 2025. While previously tested kits won't be reprocessed, MyHeritage plans to re-analyze all existing data in their database once the WGS database grows, which will ultimately lead to better results for all users.
I have already seen a significat upgrade to my ethnicity estimate and I would expect further changes and perhaps more DNA matches. 

MyHeritage.com has also announced two new webinar series to be hosted on Legacy Family Tree Webinars. The webinar series will be in French and Spanish. You can find the webinars by searching for all the upcoming webinars on the Legacy Family Tree website and choosing the filters in either French or Spanish. See https://familytreewebinars.com/upcoming-webinars/?language=french

Here are summaries of both series' upcoming webinars. 

The MyHeritage Spanish webinar series, or Seminarios Web, is a valuable, free educational resource designed to guide Spanish-speaking users through the fascinating world of genealogy and family history research.

The series provides step-by-step instruction on how to effectively use the powerful MyHeritage platform. Topics cover the essentials, such as:

  • Building Your Family Tree: Learning how to start and grow your tree with ease (Plantando un Árbol Genealógico).

  • Searching Historical Records: Mastering the advanced search engine to find ancestors in billions of records (Cómo Encontrar Registros Históricos).

  • DNA Interpretation: Understanding how to use genetic and genealogical tools like DNA Matches and AutoClusters for new discoveries.

  • Photo Restoration: Utilizing MyHeritage’s unique tools to colorize and restore old family photos (Colorear y Restaurar Fotos).

In short, it's a comprehensive library of expert-led classes—all in Spanish—to help users worldwide uncover, document, and share their family stories.

MyHeritage, through its Legacy Family Tree Webinars platform, has launched an exciting new French-language webinar series tailored for French speakers around the world. This initiative expands their educational offerings, adding a live series to the more than 100 French-language sessions already available on demand.

The series kicked off with three free live sessions focusing on French and Luxembourg genealogy:

  1. The first session, "Filae : la maison des archives originales françaises," with Yann Guillerm, focused on the holdings of Filae. This webinar, which took place on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, has already passed.

  2. The second session, "Explorer vos racines en France : méthodes et ressources en ligne avec les collections de MyHeritage," with Marie Cappart, explored methods and MyHeritage resources for French roots. This webinar, held on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, has also passed.

  3. The next and final of the initially announced free sessions is "Explorer vos racines au Luxembourg : archives locales et ressources MyHeritage," with Liliane Hierro, focusing on Luxembourg ancestry and MyHeritage collections. This session is scheduled for Tuesday, November 4, 2025, at 2 P.M. GMT / 10 A.M. EST.








Monday, October 20, 2025

A Look at the RootsTech 2026 Website

 

https://www.familysearch.org/en/rootstech/

RootsTech 2026 is coming up quickly. As I have mentioned before, one of the major event hotels in Salt Lake City, Utah, the Plaza Hotel, is being demolished begining November 1st. This is the hotel across the street to the north from the Salt Palace where the RootsTech Conference is being held March 5th through 7th. Parking and hotel accommodations in downtown in Salt Lake are at a premium and you should make arrangements as soon as possible. 

The RootsTech 2026 website is divided into several sections. Here is an outline of the Main Sections and events:

The website centers on the RootsTech Conference, which is advertised as the world's largest family history conference, offering both free online access and in-person attendance in Salt Lake City.

Key elements of the event and other sections include:

  • Registration Information: Details and pricing for attending the upcoming event, differentiating between the free Online experience and the paid Salt Lake City in-person pass.

  • Expo Hall: Information on the vendor hall for sponsors and exhibitors.

  • Watch Videos: A link to the extensive content library from previous conferences.

  • Mini Events: A section dedicated to smaller, related events.

  • Contact Us/FAQ: Support and general information for attendees.

  • FamilySearch Connect: Links to related FamilySearch tools like Build Your Family Tree and Together App.


Content & Learning Library Topics

The website highlights a large learning library with hundreds of classes and sessions that are open year-round, covering a wide range of genealogy and family discovery subjects.

The topics you can discover in the library include:

CategoryTopics Included
Research MethodsAnalysis, Archival Research, Methodology, Organizing Research, General Research, Research Aids, Record Types, Compiled Sources.
Specialized GenealogyDNA, Ethnic Research, Immigration, Latter-day Saint (LDS) sessions, Law and Ethics.
Tools & HistoryArtificial Intelligence (AI), Tools, Websites, and Organizations, History.
Discovery & HeritageDiscovery and Heritage, Activities, Photos and Stories, Preserving Your Story, Strengthening Family.
Professional DevelopmentBecoming a Professional.
InspirationInspiration, Keynote Sessions, and Main Stage Forums (Innovation, Tech, and Impact).
Registration is now open at a discount. Sometimes, there is a later discount given closer to the conference.