What’s bad about that idea? Well, it could mean libraries, as public institutions, are no longer protected from corporate greed.
Libraries may no longer be able to choose the books in their collections, preserve works for posterity, or protect patron’s privacy.
Now is not the time to attack libraries. Freedom of information is under threat, and libraries are necessary to protect our democracy. Read more: thenation.com/article/cultur…
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A group of intellectual property law professors lead by @rtushnet submitted a “friend of the court” brief in support of @internetarchive and controlled digital lending today in our case against Hachette, PRH, HarperCollins and Wiley. 🧵eff.org/document/hache…
@rtushnet 2/ The law professors’ brief notes that nonprofit libraries “serve important democratic interests” and “enable a richer, more democratic culture.”
3/ They explain that, in contrast to @internetarchive’s CDL, the publisher’s “putative licensing alternatives regularly come with policies that harm the larger mission of libraries to preserve information and make it available to citizens on a nondiscriminatory basis.”
Did you know that the Internet Archive has a physical archive that houses millions of books (as in: actual, physical, paper books)? For every book that we lend to users online, we have a physical copy that is preserved in our archive. A 🧵
We get our books the same way as other libraries: we buy books and we receive donated books. Some of those donations come from libraries that are reevaluating their physical collections, like Hamilton Public Library: blog.archive.org/2021/05/26/beh…
And some books come to us from libraries that are shutting down forever, like Marygrove College. The school closed in 2019 & rather than sell off the collection, the Board donated the entire library to us for preservation & digitization: blog.archive.org/2020/10/20/dig…
🖥️So, how many accounts & passwords do you have?
👀Research by one company finds that the average US citizen has more than 150 accounts & passwords to manage.
Crazy, right? 🧵👇
(1/4) #digitalidentity
2/ Many of us are trading #privacy & #security for convenience by handing over our personal data to big platforms that make it easier to log on...keeping our data along the way.
👉 Isn't there a better way forward? #SSI#identity
BIG NEWS: On 1/1 for the first time in history, every sound recording published since the invention of records thru 1922 entered the US #publicdomain.
Including this: Fanny Brice's "Second Hand Rose."
🎉TMW: Come to our virtual "Celebration of Sound" 1/20: eventbrite.com/e/celebration-…
2/ What will you find now in the public domain? Experts say some 400,000 recordings like this one: Scott Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag.
You can find 38,500 newly #publicdomain 78s in our collection-- now yours free to reuse & download. archive.org/details/george…
3/ And it's not just big hits! Check out some of the quirkier #publicdomain treasures in our collections, from "Fido is a Hot Dog Now" to myriad books & films. blog.archive.org/2022/01/01/wel…