Universities launch a digital public library.
In 2004, Google decided to seek out millions of books gathering dust in
library stacks, digitize them, and make them available to you at the
click of a mouse. All you had to do was notice the advertisements in the
margins.
But after Google extended its archiving effort from books in the public domain to those under copyright, the U.S.-based Authors Guild filed a class action lawsuit
in 2005. Then, while negotiating a settlement, Google decided to sell
not merely ads but the books themselves, with or without the specific
consent of copyright holders, on the ground that the guild could stand
in as their legal representative.
Not so fast, said federal judge Denny Chin,
as he rejected one Guild-Google settlement after another. And as the
case went forward, it raised a question in the minds of librarians,
writers, and archivists: Should we really put the entire repository of
human knowledge in the hands of one company?
In 2010, university librarians met in a national conference
and decided to create an alternative called the Digital Public Library
of America. Operating under the auspices of the Berkman Center for
Internet & Society at Harvard University, it would archive every
book in the public domain and offer them online to anyone. The library’s
prototype is expected to launch this year.
“This is a civic-minded engagement,” says Kenny Whitebloom, who manages
the library project. “There was a fear that Google Books was a
commercial project, and this was an opportunity to create a digital
library on its own terms.”
The Digital Public Library has a lot of things going for it. It won’t
try to sell you ads when you read books online, and it won’t try to sell
books it doesn’t have the right to. What it doesn’t have is money—or at
any rate not enough of it to scan and organize every book in the United
States. (The rest of the world is a matter the organization will have
to leave for another day.)
Instead, the Digital Public Library will serve as the archive for other
archives. All around the country, from the Library of Congress to the
Internet Archive in Northern California, libraries have been scanning
books and setting up individual databases for their collections. The
Digital Public Library of America hopes to produce a search engine that
will coordinate with these institutions, creating a single search portal
that will direct users to every single book they need, in any
collection.
Whitebloom expects to finalize the legal deals with the various
partners in the coming year. But if he gets the project going, he just
might be able to offer what Google won’t: words without ads. “It’s free
and open to all,” he says, “a sustainable national resource that will
not be beholden to commercial influences.”
This article originally appeared in print as "Read Free or Die." courtesy: http://spectrum.ieee.org
No comments:
Post a Comment