and the public was the focus of a The tension between conversation hoste by the Internet Archive and Library Futures on April 28. Wendy Hanamura moderat the event with guest panelists Joanne McNeil, author of Lurking: How a Person Became a User; Darius Kazemi, an internet artist and cofounder of Feel Train, a creative technology cooperative in Portland, Oregon; and Jennie Rose Halperin, executive director of Library Futures.
A recording of the event is now available:
Doing an online Google search can feel phone number list private because you are doing it alone at home, but corporations are accumulating your information and using it, said McNeil. The tools involvare imperfect and there are trade-offs involv.
coauthor with James Heller and Paul
Hellyer, covers restrictions on use of We were able to find the descriptions captured copyright materials, library exemptions, fair use, and licensing issues for digital mia. (Heller wrote the first ition in 2004.) The authors recently regain rights to the book in order to make it open access. So after years of being available through controll digital lending. The at the Internet Archive, the book is now available under the Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY 4.0), which means that anyone is free to share and adapt the work, as long as they provide attribution, link to the license. The and indicate if changes were made.
“Nearly 10 years had pass. It’s probably
been commercially exploit to . The the point that it will be,” Keele said. “This is what I would suggest to any faculty member. It . The s sold what it will. The and the trust review publisher got the money it deserv, so we ask for The tension between the copyright back.”