Here's my answer to the "everything's free on the Internet":
Yes, you can get everything known about <rocket science>, <brain
surgery>, <insert favorite topic here> published before 1923 for free.
If you want current stuff, that might cost you some money.
- Michele
On 7/1/2010 11:40 AM, B.G. Sloan wrote:
>
> Here's something I've always been curious about...
>
> Most of the book-scanning projects are focusing on digitizing works in the public domain, right? And the public domain is basically books published before 1923, right?
>
> So, aren't most of these projects the equivalent of building a physical library collection of pre-1923 books?
>
> I realize that Google is THE big exception here. They're scanning in-copyright works. But it remains to be seen, pending the Google books settlement, what sort of access we all will get to these works. Google may well wind up being largely a pre-1923 library collection, with some exceptions regarding access to the full text of post-1923 works.
>
> Anyway, like I said...something I've always been curious about, so I thought I'd finally ask. :-)
>
> Bernie Sloan
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--
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Received on Thu Jul 01 2010 - 12:01:53 EDT