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Subject:
From:
Angie Cope <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Maps, Air Photo & Geospatial Systems Forum
Date:
Tue, 22 Nov 2005 09:17:51 -0600
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forwarded from maphist
-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        [Maphist] Google gives $3 million to the Library of Congress
(from CNN)
Date:   Tue, 22 Nov 2005
From:   Duane Marble <[log in to unmask]>
:
To:     maps-l



* SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The Library of Congress is kicking off a
campaign on Tuesday to work with other nation's libraries to build a
World Digital Library, starting with a $3 million donation from Google
Inc. *

Librarian of Congress James Billington said he is looking to attract
further private funding to develop bilingual projects, featuring
millions of unique objects, with libraries in China, India, the Muslim
world and other nations.

This builds on major existing digital documentary projects by the
Library of Congress -- one preserving an online record of Americana and
another documenting ties between the United States and Brazil, France,
the Netherlands, Russia and Spain.

"The World Digital Library is an attempt to go beyond Europe and the
Americas...into cultures where the majority of the world is," Billington
told Reuters in a telephone interview.

As an example, Billington said the Library of Congress is in discussions
with the national library of Egypt to include a collection of great
Islamic scientific works from the 10th through the 16th Century in the
World Digital Library.

"We are trying to do a documentary record of other great cultures of the
world. How much we will be able to do will depend on how many additional
partners we attract," he said.

Over the past decade, the American Memory Project of the Library of
Congress has digitized more than 10 million items to create a
documentary record of Americana. A link is located at:
http://www.loc.gov/memory/.

These include manuscripts, maps, audiovisual recordings, cartoons,
caricatures, posters, documentary photographs, music, and, to a lesser
extent, historic books. The World Digital Library would draw on a
similar variety of multimedia objects.

A second project, known as the Global Gateway and introduced in 2000,
involves collaborations with five national libraries in Europe and
Brazil that focus on documenting ties between each of those countries
and U.S. culture.
(http://international.loc.gov/intldl/find/digital-collaborations.html/)

*Global cultures*

By contrast, the World Digital Library will focus on creating records of
global cultures. The Library of Congress will contribute its own body of
works to a blended collection with other countries. More than half of
the printed volumes in the Library of Congress are in languages other
than English.

"It will deal with the culture of those people rather than with our
contacts as Americans with those cultures," Billington said.

Web search company Google
<http://money.cnn.com/quote/quote.html?shownav=true&symb=GOOG> (Research
<http://cnnfn.investor.reuters.com/Reports.aspx?ticker=GOOG>) has agreed
to work with the Library of Congress on developing standards for
indexing the digital collections and by providing computer equipment.

The Library of Congress push adds momentum to a variety of competing
projects by leading Internet companies and some of the world's greatest
libraries to make available online a range of historic literature, audio
recordings and film archives.

The plans unveiled over the past year mark the most sustained drive yet
to make good on the vision of Internet pioneers to open the world's
library collections to a global online audience. The dream suffered from
a lack of funding and the distractions of the dot-com era's
get-rick-quick schemes.

Among these are a major push by Google with five major academic
libraries to digitize their book collections.

Meanwhile, the Open Content Alliance, backed by Yahoo Inc., Microsoft
Corp., the non-profit Internet Archive and other major libraries, is
looking to create an online clearinghouse for historic books, audio and
films.

The Google Print project has been met with lawsuits by the New
York-based Authors Guild and five U.S. publishers who are seeking to
block Google's plan to create an online card catalog of copyright works
in the collections of its library partners.

---------------------

--
Dr. Duane F. Marble             Email:  [log in to unmask]
2226 Primrose Lane              Telephone: (541) 902-8837
Florence, OR  97439             Cell:  (541) 991-1730




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