Internet Archive's Legal Fights Are Over, but Its Founder Mourns What Was Lost
Postedabout 2 months agoActiveabout 2 months ago
arstechnica.comTechstory
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Internet ArchiveCopyright LawDigital Preservation
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Internet Archive
Copyright Law
Digital Preservation
The Internet Archive has survived major copyright losses, but its founder mourns what was lost, sparking discussion about the implications of copyright law on digital preservation.
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Some of the largest intrinsic benefits of ebooks, such as ease of duplication and near-instantaneous transmission to an unlimited number of readers over the internet, essentially for free, usually cannot accrue to readers (and arguably to humanity at large), because of copyright law.
And of course copyright term extension and the elimination of renewal requirements have ensured that many books that would otherwise have entered the public domain have not, even though this copyright extension may not provide much of an incentive for most authors from 1929 to write more books.