Your email of 11 December 2020 states that you reported a copyright infringement to the CEO of DIO ‘to ascertain how and why this image was obtained and used’. Please confirm and we will proceed with the internal review. As this request was submitted and processed under the FOI Act, an internal review can be conducted on the application of section 40(2), if required. Some information was withheld under section 40(2) of the FOI Act. DIO provided a response dated 7 December 2020, which attached a copy of the requested presentation. Your request was submitted on 6 November 2020 and was logged under FOI2020/12266. Thank you for your email of 27 January, in which you have asked for an internal review to be conducted into your request titled ‘Power Point Presentation made by Col Philip Cook’ which sought release of the ‘presentation together with any associated readers notes’. My request has still remained unanswered, namely how did the DIO/MOD obtain the image used, why was it used in such a manner that the image content was intentionally linked to the depicted criminal damage and who provided authority for it to be used?Ī full history of my FOI request and all correspondence is available on the Internet at this address. This is totally unacceptable as the presentation had already been used in its original format at Press Briefings and meetings with the local council as well as placement on the public accessible What Do They Know site. The DIO/MOD did not have ownership of the image used or any authority to use it, especially in the way that it was used.įollowing my response back to the DIO on this matter I received a revised Annex A with the image removed and confirmation that 3rd party information that was not authorised for release had been used. I am writing to request an internal review of Ministry of Defence's handling of my FOI request 'Power Point Presentation made by Col Philip Cook'.įollowing receipt of the requested Power Point Presentation it was noted that an image of 2 dogs had been overlaid on other images purporting to show criminal damage, the intent was clearly to link the animals or their owner/handler to the criminal damage shown. Please pass this on to the person who conducts Freedom of Information reviews. I shall await the responses while contemplating the appropriate next course of action. The use of this image and it’s inference of criminal damage directed toward the animals and their owner/handler cannot be underestimated. The use of the image was a cynical but ill judged attempt to link the criminal damage elements on that slide to the animals and/or their owner or handler.Īccordingly I shall await your response and that of the CEO of the DIO to whom I wrote my letter of complaint. Your proposal that I should merely delete the Annex A originally supplied is a purely perfunctory response given that you have previously used the original Annex A in presentations to the news media, Ash Parish Council and possibly more before adding it to the public accessible What do they know website. Posted by Carlos Perez on Rhino News, etc.Thank you for your response and it is noted that you admit unauthorised use of the image in question, it is also noted that you have so far failed to provide how this image came into your possession or why it was used in publication. In this short introductory video, Phil Cook from Simply Rhino runs through the basics of QuadRemesh and shows an example of how this can be helpful in reverse engineering. QuadRemesh is a great new tool in Rhino 7 for reverse engineering and mesh retopology. Rhino 7 – QuadRemesh – a quick introduction Finally, the new Physically Based Materials are discussed. This includes the Cycles Raytrace Render and adding Denoiser elements with the new Package Manager in Rhino 7. In this short video, Phil Cook from Simply Rhino looks at Rendering improvements in Rhino 7. Rhino 7 – Rendering, Denoiser and Physically Based Materials In this video, Phil Cook from Simply Rhino looks at three areas where a SubD workflow could have advantages over NURBS. This is shown in Rhino for Mac but is equally relevant to Rhino for Windows. Rhino 7 – SubD Modelling in Rhino for MacĪ quick look at the new SubD modelling metaphor in Rhino 7. SimplyRhino UK has been kind enough to share 3 videos with the content covered at its last UK User Group Meeting in December.
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