Absolutely.<br /><br />I believe the issue here is when you say "publically released" you mean the document was readily available at the conference.<br /><br />However, seen as none of the media that may have been in attendance (I hear there wasn't any) took it, it stayed with just those people at the conference - as well as select members of the companies that attended.<br /><br />I would note the term publically released means it has to be given to the general public through a vehicle, such as a press release, a page on nasa.gov, part of NASA TV or a website, media or official. That didn't happen, thus the claim it wasn't publically released.<br /><br />Not that it's an issue with me. We've shown something that many thousands of people have not seen before and are greatful to view.<br /><br />It took 48 hours of hard work to check this was good information and that I was able to publish it, because I want to be a journalist who continues to have due diligence on releasing information like this.<br /><br />We're not out to beat other media to things like this, we're aiming to be a good media source for information relating to space flight, one that has a mandate of expanding interest and respect on both sides of the Atlantic for the very job people like you do.<br /><br />Maybe it will foster some young kid in some remote place in the US to become an aerospace engineer, one that in years to come can on a forum and react to a article of interest like this by saying "Already seen it".<br /><br />And I, for one, will be proud of that.