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Controlled Digital Lending Takes a Blow in Court

A Federal judge's ruling offered a stern rebuke of the Internet Archive's National Emergency Library and its controlled digital lending service, providing a significant victory for the four publishers that had filed suit.

The post Controlled Digital Lending Takes a Blow in Court appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

The Internet Archive Loses on Controlled Digital Lending

By: Roger C. Schonfeld ยทย Karin Wulf ยทย Rick Anderson ยทย Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe ยทย Joseph Esposito ยทย Roy Kaufman

On Friday, the Internet Archive lost its "controlled digital lending" case on summary judgment. Reactions today from our Chefs Rick Anderson, Joseph Esposito, Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe, Roy Kaufman, Roger C. Schonfeld, and Karin Wulf.

The post The Internet Archive Loses on Controlled Digital Lending appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

Stream 385,000 Vintage 78 RPM Records at the Internet Archive: Louis Armstrong, Glenn Miller, Billie Holiday & More

We may have yet to develop the technology of time travel, but recorded music comes pretty close. Those who listen to it have experienced how a song or an album can, in some sense, transport them right back to the time they first heard it. But older records also have the much stranger power to conjure up eras we never experienced. You can musically send yourself as far back as the nineteen-twenties with the above Youtube playlist of digitized 78 RPM records from the George Blood collection.

George Blood is the head of the audio-visual digitization company George Blood Audio, which has been participating in the Internet Archiveโ€™s Great 78 Project. โ€œThe brainchild of the Archiveโ€™s founder, Brewster Kahle, the project is dedicated to the preservation and discovery of 78rpm records,โ€ writes The Vinyl Factoryโ€™s Will Pritchard.

The piece quotes Blood himself as saying that his company has been digitizing five to six thousand records per month with the ambitious goal of creating a โ€œreference collection of sound recordings from the period of approximately 1880 to 1960.โ€ He said that five years ago. Today, the Internet Archiveโ€™s George Blood collection contains more than 385,000 records free to stream and download.

The 78 having been the most popular recorded-music format in the first few decades of the twentieth century, George Blood L.P. and the Great 78 Project as a whole have had plenty of material to work with. In the large archive built up so far youโ€™ll find plenty of obscurities โ€” the Youtube playlist at the top of the post can get you acquainted with the likes of Eric Whitley and the Green Sisters, Tin Ear Tanner and His Back Room Boys, and Douglas Venable and His Bar X Ranch Hands โ€” but also the work of musicians who remain beloved today. For the 78 was the medium through which many listeners enjoyed the big-band hit of Glenn Miller, or discovered jazz as performed by legends like Louis Armstrongย and Billie Holiday. To know their music most intimately, one would perhaps have needed to hear them in the actual nineteen-thirties, but this is surely the next best thing.

Related content:

How the Internet Archive Has Digitized More than 250,000 78 R.P.M. Records: See the Painstaking Process Up-Close

Massive Archive of 78RPM Records Now Digitized & Put Online: Stream 78,000 Early 20th Century Records from Around the World

200,000+ Vintage Records Being Digitized & Put Online by the Boston Public Library

Rare Arabic 78 RPM Records Enter the Public Domain

Download 10,000 of the First Recordings of Music Ever Made, Courtesy of the University of California-Santa Barbara

Based in Seoul,ย Colin Marshallย writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletterย Books on Cities,ย the bookย The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angelesย and the video seriesย The City in Cinema. Follow him on Twitter atย @colinmarshallย or onย Facebook.

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