[1] From: David Zeitlyn <D.Zeitlyn@ukc.ac.uk> (20)
Subject: Anthropological Index Online developments
[2] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (132)
Subject: Project Gutenberg Newsletter for January
[3] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (137)
Subject: Urgent Item: Copyright legislation, Action Alert
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 1998 18:57:26 +0000
From: David Zeitlyn <D.Zeitlyn@ukc.ac.uk>
Subject: Anthropological Index Online developments
Anthropological Index Online continues to develop - the recent data file
was updated before and after the new year, and we have now implemented the
automatic searching of cross reference files - of use for names (where
alternative transliteratiosn exist, for journal titles where names change
(e.g. Man => JRAI) and for keywords (soon).
More changes are planned over the next few months and email-only access is
now in advanced beta testing
yours sincerely
david z
Dr David Zeitlyn,
Lecturer in Social Anthropology,
Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing,
Department of Anthropology,
Eliot College, The University of Kent,
Canterbury,
CT2 7NS, UK.
Tel. (44) 1227 764000 -Extn 3360 (or 823360 direct)
Fax (44) 1227 827289
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 1998 15:31:47 -0500 (EST)
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: Project Gutenberg Newsletter for January
>> From: "Michael S. Hart" <hart@prairienet.org>
The Project Gutenberg Newsletter for January 1, 1998
[We will hold off sending this for a week so it will
not clog your mailboxes during the holidays. . . . ]
1997 was the first year we did not double production
of Etexts in quite some time, but on the other hand,
it was the first year other Etexts producers created
enough Etexts that our goal of getting 10,000 Etexts
online by the end of the year 2001 is still viable--
presuming we can gain some reciprocity with them, in
the matter of posting each other's Etexts.
Many of these other Etext operations have taken some
different approaches to the creation or distribution
of Etexts than anyone might have envisioned just the
smallest number of years ago, from the changing of a
few words here and there to attempt to copyright the
Etexts posted on their sites, to simply requesting a
voluntary situation in which no one reposts the file
even though it is admittedly in the Public Domain.
This has been caused by the manners in which the Web
services propagate their own existence:
Hits have become the currency of the World Wide Web!
Therefore, in order to give full reciprocity to this
array of Web sites that think of hits as currency we
have to create hit counters that can be mounted on a
variety of Project Gutenberg sites and will monthly,
or even weekly, relay the proper number of hits to a
site whose Etexts we are distributing to the world.
**
Therefore, if you know any programmers who should be
somewhat interested in Project Gutenberg or the kind
of programming this would take, we would love to get
email from them at hart@pobox.com or gutenberg@. . .
***
While I was out on the West Coast in November, I got
some 9 gigabyte hard drives, and we will have larger
and more versatile hard drive systems for the upload
and download of our files. If you are sending us an
Etext, just ask for the new locations if the ones we
have been using are not working properly. The login
and password system for at least one of the new site
locations is somewhat different than before.
***
1998 is the first year I will be putting any serious
efforts into the administrative area known simply as
Schmoozing
If you could suggest anyone I should contact to work
on getting support for Project Gutenberg, please let
me know, as it has become very obvious to me that it
is not going to be that much longer that I can be an
overly central figure in Project Gutenberg. If this
project is going to continue 10,000, 1,000, 100, 10,
or even five years from now it is going to take more
support than I can personally provide.
Once again my HUGE THANKS to all of you who help our
efforts to combat ignorance and illiteracy.
And here are the 32 December Project Gutenberg Etexts
which conclude the 384 Etexts for 1997. We will make
/etext98 directories shortly, and will advise you how
to get the files from them when we announce 32 Etexts
for January, about a month from now.
Mon Year Title and Author [# of PG books by the author][filename.ext]####
A "C" following the Etext number indicates a copyrighted work.
Dec 1997 The Story of the Volsungs [re: Wagner's "Ring"] [vlsngxxx.txt]1152
Dec 1997 The Nibelungenlied [Another Source for The Ring] [nblngxxx.txt]1151
Dec 1997 The Danish History/Books I-IX, by Saxo Grammaticus[dnhstxxx.txt]1150
Dec 1997 From London to Land's End, by Daniel Defoe [DD #6][lndlexxx.txt]1149
Dec 1997 Itineray of Baldwin in Wales, Giraldus Cambrensis [itwlsxxx.txt]1148
Dec 1997 From This World to the Next, by Henry Fielding #2[jtwtnxxx.txt]1147
Dec 1997 Journal of A Voyage to Lisbon by Henry Fielding #1[jlsbnxxx.txt]1146
Dec 1997 Rupert of Hentzau, by Anthony Hope [See Zenda]# [rprhnxxx.xxx]1145
Dec 1997 In the Cage, by Henry James [Henry James #16] [incagxx.xxx]1144
Dec 1997 Notes on Life and Letters, by Joseph Conrad [#19] [ntlflxx.xxx]1143
Dec 1997 Typhoon, by Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad #18] [typhnxx.xxx]1142
Dec 1997 Selected Poems of Oscar Wilde [Oscar Wilde #17] [spoowxx.xxx]1141
Dec 1997 Latter-Day Pamphlets, by Thomas Carlyle[Carlyle #4][latdaxx.xxx]1140
Dec 1997 Fisherman's Luck, by Henry van Dyke [Van Dyke #3][fshlkxx.xxx]1139
Dec 1997 The Research Magnificent, by H.G. Wells [Wells #13][rschmxx.xxx]1138
Dec 1997 A Lover's Complaint, by William Shakespeare [WL] [1ws44xx.xxx]1137
Dec 1997 King Henry VIII, by William Shakespeare [WL] [1ws42xx.xxx]1136
Dec 1997 Tempest, by William Shakespeare [World Library] [1ws41xx.xxx]1135
Dec 1997 The Winter's Tale, by William Shakespeare [WL] [1ws40xx.xxx]1134
Dec 1997 Cymbeline, by William Shakespeare [World Library] [1ws39xx.xxx]1133
Dec 1997 The Life of Timon of Athens, by Wm Shakespeare [WL][1ws37xx.xxx]1132
Dec 1997 The Tragedy of Coriolanus, William Shakespeare [WL][1ws36xx.xxx]1131
Dec 1997 Antony and Cleopatra, by William Shakespeare [WL][1ws35xx.xxx]1130
Dec 1997 Macbeth, by William Shakespeare [World Library] [1ws34xx.xxx]1129
Dec 1997 King Lear, by William Shakespeare [World Library] [1ws32xx.xxx]1128
Dec 1997 Othello, The Moor of Venice, by Shakespeare [WL][1ws32xx.xxx]1127
Dec 1997 Measure for Measure, by William Shakespeare [WL][1ws31xx.xxx]1126
Dec 1997 All's Well that End's Well, William Shakespeare[WL][1ws30xx.xxx]1125
Dec 1997 History of Troilus and Cressida, by Shakespeare[WL][1ws29xx.xxx]1124
Dec 1997 Twelfth Night; or What You Will, by Shakespeare[WL][1ws28xx.xxx]1123
Dec 1997 Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, by Wm Shakespeare [WL][1ws26xx.xxx]1122
Dec 1997 As You Like It, William Shakespeare [World Library][1ws25xx.xxx]1121
I am currently caught up with 80% of the email, and should do another 10%
each day for the rest of the week, thus keeping some promises that I will
be caught up by the end of the week, at least with email. This will make
the rest of the month run at posting two Etexts per day, which I can do--
if nothing major comes up.
If you have been expecting email from me, and do not receive it Friday...
please resend, and let me know it is a resent message.
We are currently creating the /etext98 directories, so those of you doing
mirrors of our etexts should make sure that it comes up on your systems.
This particular note is going out on a number of listservers, including a
new gutnberg listserver at the University of North Carolina, whom we will
be indebted to for the duration. A separate message will go out in a day
or two, reviewing 1997, and another message will go to the volunteers. I
would NOT use THIS message to conclude whether you are on our listserver.
We will keep you updated on the new listservers and fileservers as things
get underway for 1998.
Again our thanks to all those who have helped us get this far, and thanks
to those who will be helping us through 1998!
Thanks!
=============================================
Michael S. Hart, Professor of Electronic Text
Benedictine University [Illinois Benedictine]
Carnegie Mellon University Visiting Scientist
Executive Director of Project Gutenberg Etext
Post Office Box 2782, Champaign IL 61825-3231
No official connection to U of Illinois--UIUC
Permanent Internet Address!!! hart@pobox.com
Internet User Number 100 [approximately] [TM]
One of the several "Ask Dr Internet" Sponsors
Break Down the Bars of Ignorance & Illiteracy
On the Carnegie Libraries' 100th Anniversary!
If I don't answer in two days, please resend.
It usually means I did not get/see your note.
For General Information on Project Gutenberg
Please send us email at: dircompg@pobox.com
--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 1998 15:35:45 -0500 (EST)
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: Urgent Item: Copyright legislation, Action Alert
>> From: cyselfe@mtu.edu (Cindy Selfe)
> Dear Colleague,
>
> As Chair of the CCCC, I want to urge you to support two important
> pieces of copyright legislation now before Congress. Your *immediate
> action* is needed. I ask two things of you:
>
> 1. Please write, visit, or call your House Representative and urge
> him/her to *co-sponsor* H.R. 3048, the "Digital Era Copyright
> Enhancement Act," sponsored by Representatives Rick Boucher (D-VA)
> and Tom Campbell (R-CA).
>
> 2. Please write, visit, or call your Senatorand urge him/her to
> support S. 1146, the "Digital Copyright Clarification and Technology
> Act" introduced by Senator John Ashcroft.
>
> These two bills expand current "fair use" legislation to the digital
> age. They ensure that educators, students, and the public will have
> access to electronic information, can browse the Internet and World
> Wide Web online without copy-right infringement, and can use and
> exchange knowledge for educational and research purposes.
>
> In short,these bills balance and correct much more restrictive and
> punitive legislation that is now being considered in Congress.
>
> Without these bills, we may face a future in which *fair use is
> abolished* in the digital era and in which only teachers and
> students who can afford to "pay-per-browse" can access, quote from,
> and analyze electronic information.
>
> The Digital Future Coalition, to which NCTE and CCCC belong, is urging
> all its members to contact their House Representatives, requesting
> *co-sponsorship* of H.R. 3048 and their Senators, requesting support for
> S. 1146. Handwritten letters and personal visits are most effective.
>
> Please consider visiting your representative's local office while
> Congress is in recess (until Jan 26). And please alert your colleagues
> and students about this important legislation.
>
> A brief summary of H.R. 3048 appears below; more details are available
> at the Digital Future Coalition's website (http://www.dfc.org).
>
> To find out who represents you in Congress, visit
> http://lcweb.loc.gov/global/legislative/email.html
>
> More details on H.R. 3048 follow:
>
> The Boucher-Campbell Bill, H.R. 3048
>
> What Does It Do? Why Does DFC Support It?
>
> Representatives Rick Boucher (D-VA) and Tom Campbell (R-CA) have
> introduced the only comprehensive bill in the U.S. House of
> Representatives that will maintain balance in the Copyright Act by
> preserving for consumers, educators, librarians, researchers, and other
> Netizens fundamental rights in the digital era. Like a similar bill
> introduced by Senator John Ashcroft (S. 1146), this comprehensive,
> balanced bill has the strong support of the DFC. If you agree with us
> that the House of Representatives should adopt the Boucher-Campbell bill
> instead of the legislation proposed by the Clinton Administration (H.R.
> 2281), we encourage you to send an e-mail to your elected Representative
> in the House. (To contact your Representative, click here to connect to
> a Library of Congress compilation of e-mail directories--the site also
> includes a helpful "Who represents me in Congress" section and regular
> mail addresses.)
>
>
> Section 1. The bill is known as the "Digital Era Copyright Enhancement
> Act."
>
> Fair Use. Section 2 would amend section 107 of the Copyright
> Act to reaffirm that a finding of "fair use" may be made
> without regard to the means by which a work has been performed,
> displayed, or distributed. Thus, just as teachers, librarians, and
> others may make "fair use" copies of portions of copyrighted works
> today in the analog world, they may do so tomorrow in the digital
> world.
>
> Library Preservation. Section 3 would amend section 108 of the
> Copyright Act to allow libraries and archives to use new forms of
> technology to make three copies of endangered materials for
> archival purposes.
>
> First Sale. Section 4 would amend section 109 of the Copyright Act
> to establish the digital equivalent of the "first sale" doctrine.
> Under current law, a person who has legally obtained a book or
> video cassette may physically transfer it to another person without
> permission of the copyright owner. Section 4 would permit
> electronic transmission of a lawfully acquired digital copy of a
> work as long as the person making the transfer eliminates erases or
> that copy of the work from his or her system at substantially the
> same time as he or she makes the transfer.
>
> Distance Learning. Section 5 would amend sections 110(2) and 112(b)
> of the Copyright Act to ensure that educators can use personal
> computers and new technology in a broad range of educational
> settings in the same way they now use televisions to foster
> distance learning. In addition, Section 5 would broaden the range
> of works that may be performed, displayed, or distributed to
> include the various kinds of works that might be included in a
> multimedia lesson.
>
> Ephemeral Copies. Section 6 would amend section 117 of the
> Copyright Act to make explicit that electronic copies of material
> incidentally or temporarily made in the process of using a computer
> or a computer network may not serve as the sole basis for copyright
> infringement liability, such as when a work is viewed on the World
> Wide Web.
>
> Unfair Licenses. Section 7 would effectively preclude copyright
> owners from using non-negotiable license terms to abrogate or
> narrow rights and use privileges that consumers otherwise would
> enjoy under the Copyright Act, such as their fair use privilege, by
> preempting state common and statutory law, such as the proposed
> changes to the Uniform Commercial Code.
>
> Black Boxes. Section 8 would implement the anti-circumvention and
> copyright management information provisions of the WIPO Copyright
> Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. The treaties
> do not require the broad prohibition of software and devices that
> might be used by infringers as proposed in the legislation drafted
> by the Clinton Administration. Consistent with the treaties, section
> 8 would create liability only for a person who, for purposes of
> infringement, knowingly circumvents the operation of an effective
> technological measure used by a copyright owner to limit
> reproduction of a work in a digital format. The bill also would
> create liability for a person who knowingly provides false copyright
> management information or removes or alters copyright management
> information without the authority of the copyright owner, and with
> the intent to mislead or induce or facilitate infringement.
Cynthia L. Selfe
Humanities Department
Michigan Technological University
1400 Townsend Dr.
Houghton, MI 49931
Internet: cyselfe@mtu.edu
Telephone: (906) 487-2447
Fax: (906) 487-3559
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