/ about Free the Books

Free the Books

conjugating international copyright laws
As a Google Library Partner , The University of Texas Libraries will digitize at least one million books from the Libraries’ unique collections, starting with our Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection. This rich collection holds over 800,000 titles about and from Mexico, Central and South America and the Caribbean. Librarians, faculty and alumni acquired these works by gift, exchange and purchase over eight decades to create a comprehensive collection to support teaching and research at the university.

Current technologies enable us to provide virtual access to these collections for study anywhere, but a tangle of international treaties and copyright laws complicates our use and distribution of foreign works. There is little guidance to help us reliably identify which of our books are already in the public domain so we are piloting a project to develop new tools for ourselves and for anyone who wants to tackle these difficult public domain problems. We will document our process, our progress and our results on these pages along with links to web resources we find useful. We invite suggestions and comments from other Google Library Partners and anyone undertaking similar or related projects. Comment on our posts.

Email us at freethebooks@gmail.com. We are here; we are building an evidence base and we are looking for virtual partners!

A member of the University of Texas LibBlogs network




 / conjugating international copyright laws


Orphan Works Bill Died as House Adjourned

The following post appeared yesterday in the Public Policy Connections blog of the Special Libraries  Association (SLA).

 ”After passing in the Senate on 26 September, the Orphan Works bill, which limits remedies in copyright infringement cases involving orphan works, died in the House on 3 October after Congress voted on the financial rescue bill and ajourned.In June 2008, The Library Copyright Alliance, of which SLA is a member, wrote a letter to Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), Chairman, Committee on the Judiciary and Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) expressing appreciation for their continued leadership on the bill. The letter proposed amendments to orphan works legislation.”

The blog post is self-explanatory and linked, at least for the time being, to all pertinent events, documents, and commentary, including the full-text of the Shawn Bentley Orphan Works Act of 2008 that had passed the Senate in September. The SLA blog post also includes links to a CBS news article about the approval of the financial rescue bill. The brief CBS News article puts the process of keeping the orphan works issue in perspective. Like so many other issues that are central to our academic work and policy concerns, orphan works have been pushed off the radar screen by the present economic collapse.

Nevertheless, Gigi Sohn at Public Knowledge remains confident that orphan works–like the Mets–will return to Congressional attention as a policy issue. Sohn noted that it was not just that the bill was eclipsed by economic concerns but that there are substantive issues yet to be worked out.

We should stay tuned to this ongoing debate and watch some of the key players recognize the changing environment in which they create and alter their positions.

 

 

 

comments

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>