![]() ![]() officials to travel to Pakistan since the raid. Joint Chiefs of Staff, were the highest ranking U.S. In the U.S., suspicions have abounded that elements in Pakistan’s security services may have harbored the terrorist mastermind, and some lawmakers have called for a review of the billions in military and humanitarian aid that the U.S. has been asked to reduce the number of military personnel it has stationed in nuclear-armed Pakistan, which has become a nexus for Islamic extremism. Parliament has passed resolutions condemning the U.S. Pakistani officials are angry they were not told in advance of the raid against bin Laden, who was living in an army town not far from the capital, Islamabad. won’t abandon an alliance it considers critical to success in the war in Afghanistan and that both countries had shared interests, Clinton also criticized Pakistanis for propagating conspiracy theories and anti-American sentiment. delegation, and it was unclear how much, if any, progress was made.Īlthough she stressed that the U.S. A brief portion of the meetings witnessed by reporters was stiff and awkward, with no smiles among the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Friday that relations between the United States and Pakistan have reached a turning point after the killing of Osama bin Laden and she called on Islamabad to take "decisive steps" in the days ahead to fight terrorism.Ĭlinton made the remarks after meeting with Pakistani leaders on a seven-hour trip aimed at repairing ties badly damaged by the May 2 U.S. Prepared by: Prints and Photographs Division staff. įor more information, please read: CopyrightĪnd Other Restrictions That Apply to Publication/Distribution of Images: Assessing the Risk of Using a P&P Image Privacy and publicityĪccess: Subject to P&P policy on serving originals.Ĭamera copying, photoduplication and otherįorms of copying allowed by "fair use"): Subject to P&P policy on copying.Ĭredit Line: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division. When its copyright status is unknown or ambiguous. Of the lack of pertinent information, and researchers often have to makeĬalculated risk decisions concerning the appropriate use of an image (For a summary of copyright terms, see: Copyright and Other Restrictions That Apply to Publication/Distribution of Images: Assessing the Risk of Using a P&P Image - How Long Copyrights Last.)Īdditionally, researchers should be advised thatĭetermining the copyright status of photographs can be problematic because In the collection may be protected even if they were not registered with However, the Library’s legal office has advised the Division that photographs published with proper copyright notices 95 years ago or less up until 1963 may be protected if the copyright was properly renewed, while works published after 1963 and unpublished photographs It was found that only a few images were registeredįor copyright and those copyrights were not renewed. Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress searched theĬopyright Office files. In an attempt to determine if ACME registeredĪny copyrights and if those copyrights were renewed, Specialists in the However, any copyright held by ACME that is still current would now be owned by VCG, administered by Getty Images. Neither VCG nor Getty Images controls the copying of ACME images housed in the Library of Congress. In 2016, CORBIS was, in turn, sold to Visual China Group (VCG), which arranged to have Getty Images be the exclusive distributor of CORBIS images outside of China. The ACME archives was bought by CORBIS, which controlled the copying of ACME images physically housed in its archives in New York City. ![]() ![]() Publication and other forms of distribution: May be restricted. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., 20540-4730 ACME Photographs - Rights and Restrictions Information (Prints and Photographs Reading Room, Library of Congress) TheĪCME Photographs Rights and Restrictions Information ![]()
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