The first, in fact, were the HarvardUniversity Library, the University of Michigan Library, the New York Public Library, Oxford's Bodleian Library, and Stanford UniversityLibraries (SULAIR). The Google Books project has scanned over 12 million...
The letter, signed by National Consumers League President Linda Golodner, acknowledges the tremendous potential value in Google Inc.s bold vision for the new initiative, in which the complete collection of works at the universitylibraries of...
In March, the Harvard Crimson ran a story about copyright issues and the Google Library program When I first learned about Google's plan to digitize the full text holdings of several large libraries one of the first things that came to mind was...
Points of views
from both sides, though I have to say this quote from a past library directory made my eyebrows raise: "Copyright laws are written for companies like Time Warner and Disney
instead of research libraries like Harvard.
UPDATE: While we're on the topic of Google Print and libraries, Tara points us to this Harvard Crimson article: Harvard-Google Project Faces Copyright Woes. To think that large universitylibraries that Google is working with don't have thousands...
Google Partners with Oxford, Harvard Ask Jeeves Where's The Blog Search? Ten large libraries are taking part in the project including the Carnegie Mellon University Library, The Library of Congress, and the University of Toronto Library.
Google Partners with Oxford, Harvard Ask Jeeves Where's The Blog Search? Ten large libraries are taking part in the project including the Carnegie Mellon University Library, The Library of Congress, and the University of Toronto Library.
This morning Google is announcing a new program to digitize millions of library books (full text) from five large research libraries (Stanford, University of Michigan, Harvard, Oxford, New York Public Library) and make them accessible via their...
Google is working with libraries at the University of Michigan, HarvardUniversity, Stanford University, Oxford University and the New York Public Library to digitize books in their collections and make them accessible via Google Print.