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the snowman's travails (more)
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: the snowman's travails (more)
- From: "James J. O'Donnell" <jod@georgetown.edu>
- Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2007 18:09:49 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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A further exchange David Rosenthal and I had on his blog overnight . . . David Rosenthal said: I should have used Google earlier. It turns out that a team at the University of North Carolina is in fact selecting and collecting YouTube video of the 2008 Presidential campaign. They describe their system in this paper (PDF). However, their focus is on the process of identifying and selecting suitable videos. Their paper ignores the issues of preservation. The paper also fails to make the economic case for expending resources on collecting and preserving video that there is no convincing reason to believe won't be available from YouTube indefinitely. To steal Jim's words from the comment above, they don't think the snowman is lucky. I should stress that I believe the case can be made, but it is not a slam dunk and it does not depend on knowing whether Google will continue to make the video available. Maybe you trust a single archive to control history. Or maybe you are worried about future Winston Smiths, whether corporate or governmental. October 15, 2007 10:49 PM ____________________________________________ Jim O'Donnell said... And meanwhile, Google themselves just made the rights management issue harder. If you got those snowman clips from CNN or another provider that claims copyright, well . . .: ***** Google Takes Step on Video Copyrights By MIGUEL HELFT Published: October 16, 2007, New York Times "SAN BRUNO, Calif., Oct. 15 - Google is seeking to put an end to the copyright wars over online video. "On Monday, the company unveiled a long-anticipated system that, if effective, would allow media companies to prevent their clips from being uploaded to YouTube without permission. "Whether the system will work well enough to satisfy media companies who have been irked by the proliferation of unauthorized copyrighted clips on YouTube is not yet clear. But if successful, the system, which Google is offering to all media companies, could usher in a detente between them and Google." Jim O'Donnell
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