Contributed by Organizations or Campuses; Articles, Papers, and Reports; Digital Preservation; and Search Engines
Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books
| Title: | Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books (ID: CSD5107) | | Author(s): | Paul Duguid (University of California, Berkeley) | | Source: | First Monday | | Origin: | Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (09/04/2007) | | Type: | Articles, Papers, and Reports | | Abstract: | The Google Books Project has drawn a great deal of attention, offering the prospect of the library of the future and rendering many other library and digitizing projects apparently superfluous. To grasp the value of Google’s endeavor, we need among other things, to assess its quality. On such a vast and undocumented project, the task is challenging. In this essay, I attempt an initial assessment in two steps. First, I argue that most quality assurance on the Web is provided either through innovation or through “inheritance.” In the later case, Web sites rely heavily on institutional authority and quality assurance techniques that antedate the Web, assuming that they will carry across unproblematically into the digital world. I suggest that quality assurance in the Google’s Book Search and Google Books Library Project primarily comes through inheritance, drawing on the reputation of the libraries, and before them publishers involved. Then I chose one book to sample the Google’s Project, Lawrence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy. | | View this resource: | |
Yahoo Works With 2 Academic Libraries and Other Archives on Project to Digitize Collections
| Title: | Yahoo Works With 2 Academic Libraries and Other Archives on Project to Digitize Collections (ID: CSD4228) | | Author(s): | Scott Carlson (The Chronicle of Higher Education) and Jeffrey R. Young (The Chronicle of Higher Education) | | Origin: | Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (2005) | | Type: | Articles, Papers, and Reports | | Abstract: | Yahoo has announced a plan to scan large collections of texts into an online digital archive, though officials said their approach differs in important ways from Google's similar venture, which has drawn extensive criticism and legal action. Yahoo's initiative, called the Open Content Alliance (OCA), represents a partnership with the University of California, the University of Toronto, the Internet Archive, and several other companies and organizations. Unlike Google's project, they will not scan any copyrighted work without explicit permission. Organizers of the project said the goal is to digitize and make freely available as much of what is in the public domain as possible. In addition, the archive will not be restricted to users of Yahoo. David Mandelbrot, Yahoo's vice president for search content, said the texts will be online in such a way that other search engines will be able to locate them. Much of the scanning for the OCA will be done by the Internet Archive, which has already been working with the University of Toronto on scanning several thousand books in its collection. | | View this resource: | |
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