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Yahoo backs digital library plan
Reading room
As well as Yahoo, the Open Content Alliance also includes the non-profit Internet Archive, libraries from the universities of California and Toronto, Adobe and Hewlett-Packard.
The information to be digitised will include books, speeches, audio, video and music.
The Open Content Alliance said it would start with works that were in the public domain as well as those books in copyright that their owners were happy to be freely browsable online.
"We are only including copyrighted content with the express permission of the copyright holder," said David Mandelbrot, Yahoo's vice president of search content.
The core of the Open Content Alliance library will be 18,000 classic works of American literature that include writing by Mark Twain, Henry James and Edgar Allan Poe.
Currently Britain's National Archive and the European Archive are deciding what material to contribute to the project.
The end result will be a huge online collection freely available to web users. The first works to be digitised should be online by the end of the year and all 18,000 works should be available through the net by the close of 2006.
By contrast to Alliance's "opt-in" policy, Google's rival digital plan has adopted an "opt-out" approach that will digitise all works in several libraries, mainly university libraries from Harvard, Stanford and Michigan, unless copyright owners object.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/technology/4304192.stm
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