Ancient Books Go Online
jd writes "The BBC is reporting that the United Nations' World Digital Library has gone online with an initial offering of 1,200 ancient manuscripts, parchments and documents. To no great surprise, Europe comes in first with 380 items. South America comes in second with 320, with a very distant third place being given to the Middle East at a paltry 157 texts. This is only the initial round, so the leader board can be expected to change. There are, for example, a lot of Sumerian and Babylonian tablets, many of which are already online elsewhere. Astonishingly, the collection is covered by numerous copyright laws, according to the legal page. Use of material from a given country is subject to whatever restrictions that country places, in addition to any local and international copyright laws. With some of the contributions being over 8,000 years old, this has to be the longest copyright extension ever offered. There is nothing on whether the original artists get royalties, however."
Copyright seems to have an indefinite life these days...
With some of the contributions being over 8,000 years old, this has to be the longest copyright extension ever offered.
Is anyone surprised at this? Seriously, does copyright ever end these days?
This post was made in complete sincere seriousity; as such any attempts to derive humour are doomed to instant failure.
Are they simply making it easier to find out if something is copyrighted?
Did anyone else see "Ancient Books Go..." and think they'd discovered some ancient Go books?
Surprisingly, as time goes by, the amount of ancient material available INCREASES every year. Old texts that are found and discovered are digitized and released to the world, rather than being lost in obscurity, readable by a small handful until the ultimate demise of the original work.
I see this every day.
For example, years back, when I was in High School, I was a big fan of "alternative" music. Bands like Depeche Mode, Erasure, Bauhaus, and others were my meat and potatoes, but being raised in small-town, USA, I had to work like the pretty hard to find stuff to listen to. My specialty was rare concert mixes and exploratory remixes - in many cases, I resigned to dubbing cassettes in order to get my fix.
Today, it's much easier for me to find rare, concert remixes! Many (most?) are available in mere seconds a la YouTube, as well as MP3s by LimeWire! And it seems that with each year, more and more and more obscure stuff is available - from Jerry Lee Lewis concerts to Arlo Guthrie live to early stage mixes of Yaz (then "Yazoo") ...
Why is this so?
Take a look at the Long Tail Economics principle made possible by the network effect of the Internet. This is one of the most insightful articles that exists on the Internet!
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
In other news, Dane Cook is (yet again) being accused of 'appropriating' material from other comedians!
Gravestone uncovered by excavations for the new Pan-Continental Bicycle Suspension Bridge Project...
"Here Lies Alfred E. Neuman
Mad as Hell...
Born 1954, Died 2337
Copyright, 1954"
The bit about copyright on the "legal" page is just boilerplate. All it means is that the presentation of a document on this site doesn't necessarily make it public domain or grant some other license, that the owners of the original document retain whatever rights they have. The copyright laws of individual countries are only valid within that country - you only need to concern yourself with your own country's laws. There are indeed a lot of problems with excessive copyright in the world, but the copyright concerns in the post are much ado about nothing.
What the hell is:
To no great surprise, Europe comes in first with 380 items. South America comes in second with 320, with a very distant third place being given to the Middle East at a paltry 157 texts
suppose to mean?
A) That it's no surprise that they haven't been preserved or added to the catalog?
B) That it's no surprise that Middle Eastern culture doesn't have many manuscripts?
I hope/expect it's the first, because if it's the second the ignorance and rascism displayed is abominable for slashdot. Either way it shouldn't be so ambiguous? Where are the editors??? Out to lunch with Cmdr Taco?
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
To the people tagging this !tech:
The success of technology is intimately tied to the free flow of information. Issues like there are important, because poorly designed restrictions inhibit our ability to make technological progress without spending a huge amount of resources on needless legal bickering.
If 8000-year-old documents are being withheld from the public domain there's a problem. A problem affecting both the richness of our culture and our ability to do science and apply it in the technology sector.
.: Max Romantschuk
You think like a ReThuglican Jew
I was checking Middle-Eastern texts out, and it was pretty interesting how they got the "first page" of the text to be in fact the page, and the last page is in fact the first page.
Funny, really.
NOTE: The Long Tail theory of economics has been fairly well refuted since the publication of the book...for most industries, at least:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121493784638920147.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Isn't the Long Tail theory the idea that you don't need as big percentage of population to support you as before because Internet allows for larger population to be aware of your products? There might only be one person in million who loves your music (and thus even USA would only have around 300 fans), but worldwide it means six million fans (supposing everybody had the same purchasing power) all who know of you thanks to the Internet?
I could see that this system would be largely infeasible for products with large physical dimensions, but for CD's or (even better) totally immaterial goods such as mp3's might well benefit from this sort of thinking.
Now, the question is how do you drum word-of-mouth when none of your fans have ever met each other IRL due to distances..
Chronologically late.
The Sankrt texts that are written on banana leaves in India need to be oiled to prevent them breaking down. Part of the the deal for the caste system was that the Brahmans had to upkeep the texts, unfortunately now they are in a modern society and these text are being lost to decay. The yoga karuna (the instructions of astanga yoga) was "eaten by the ants" according to S.K Patabi Jois.
Some of the original artists were royalties.
I hear Gozer was very big in Sumeria. Hopefully there's something in these texts to suggest what he's doing in my icebox.
'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
Why are they copyrighted?
Well, I'd guess its because these texts were probably discovered relatively recently and that the people that found them and decoded them did some important work. Without knowing more I'd guess that the copyright exists in that work, the work of transcribing the texts.
Copyright certainly can't apply to the original work - if you want to go and read the original work and transcribe it yourself nothing to stop you, apart from the key holders to the museum/vault where they are held.
As a descendant of all these authors I claim my cut of the monies due ...
Surely this logic fails simply because the total amount of money (or time, or interest, or whatever you'd like to measure as a cost) is roughly constant - so for a given product to become more popular, other products must become less popular.
There is a Swedish company that has done this in Sweden. Their user side technology is based on a really horrible Flash interface, but most public collections of rare manuscripts are available online. I talked with one of their representatives about a year ago and, if I don't remember incorrect, there were about 900 manuscripts already published at different Swedish museum sites and even more in the process of being photographed.
Sweden pillaged Northern and Middle Europe for more then a thousand year (and those parts of Europe pillaged southern Europe and their pillage ended up as our pillage), no other nation ever got much of a chance to pillage Sweden and now our museums have a lot more European manuscripts then the rest of Europe all together, from about any culture that has been writing things down in Europe. The selection is kind of random as the Swedish armies/vikings/pirates preferred books with a lot of gold and jewels (usually removed when the books reached Sweden) or parchment books that could be made into blank books to be used for military book keeping and didn't look much at the actual content. Although there where sometimes standing orders from Swedish scholars what to take and from the Thirty Years' War and forward there where always a large group of scholar expert pillagers accompanying the Swedish army.
If the total amount of money were constant, then interest rates would have to be zero. In reality, money is created out of thin air every day.
Frozen Caveman Lawyer....
I'm still waiting for Israel Online or Bible Online, 29AD Online (maccabes?). You would have prophet classes similar to druids and the opposing faction could be the romans with centurions :)
Quite a few in English...
http://www.wdl.org/en/search/gallery?ql=eng&l=English
Except you would only have 6000 fans in the entire world since the world's population is 6 billion, not 6 trillion.
"There's someone in my head but it's not me." - Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon
There are already several project to scan and/or make available ancient texts [see, for example,
http://gallica.bnf.fr/ or http://www.archive.org/ , not to say of the more specialist sites like http://www.etana.org/ (for ancient near-east history) or the impressive Posner Collection at
http://posner.library.cmu.edu/Posner/ ]
However, most of these (with the remarkable exception of gallica and cmu)
mostly present late XIX
early XX century editions of the texts. This is good, but I feel it is definitely interesting to get also some "primary texts" online, which is what this project is doing [I don't quite like that la "Description de l'Egypte" is under 8000 BC- 499 AD, rather than 1800 AD - 1849 AD: the books are ABOUT Egyptian Antiquities, yet they were written after the Napoleonic expedition!]
I was going to complain about the need to use wget to get the books to browse off line, yet I have just seen that there actually is an option to download the texts as pdf files (alas not djvu); this is really a nice surprise; actually, I was expecting the donating libraries to try their utmost to prevent this [not that it would ever works]
I would say that this is really a worthy project.
P.S.
There is a small editorial here as well, but I don't know if it requires subscription to be read:
http://www.nature.com/news/2009/090420/full/news.2009.377.html
"an initial offering of 1,200 ancient manuscripts, parchments and documents"
Huh? Many manuscripts (something written by hand) are also parchments (sheets made from animal skin), and they're pretty much all documents, no matter how they were produced or what material they're on. So why not just say "an initial offering of 1,200 ancient documents"?
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Yes, you are quite correct. I got my cables mixed. However, 6000 people are more than enough to support one artist/coder.
Chronologically late.
In reality, money is created out of thin air every day.
In reality, the money created out of thin air in a fractional reserve banking system is debt. Debt is still money, but to pay it off requires... more debt. Fractional reserve banking is a Ponzi scheme. We are currently experiencing the collapse of it.
Oh, and if the total amount of money were constant interests rates would not be zero: the future value of money would still be less than the present value, in the sense that I'd rather have a dollar today than 1.1 dollars ten years from now unless deflation really got out of control, so debt and interest would still be with us. But any productive enterprise would have to be MORE productive than the deflationary increment in monetary value to be worth investing in. Of course, since economic growth in a system of sound money would be much slower than in a fractional reserve system this would be much less of a barrier to entry than today. And all of the economic growth in such a system would be real, rather than the fictional growth--followed by inevitable collapse--that fractional reserve economies experience.
Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
Get em each to give you $5 a year and you have a nice side job (though that is easily said, perhaps not so easily done).
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
Maybe. It could be the case that there are people willing to spend $25 on music but only able to find $10 of music that they like (and then it comes down to whether you want to consider the music industry separately or not; if you do, it is easy to conclude that the $15 is being added to the market).
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
Thats my great great^5 grand pappy's scroll Send me my check.
If Gozer isn't compensated for his copyright on those Sumerian texts, many librarians will know what it is like to be roasted in the depths of the Sloar, I can tell you!
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Really, copyrighting of ancient texts is nothing new. The thing is that you don't generally find an ancient text all nicely wrapped up, clear and legible in one place. Generally, you find bits and pieces of it scattered all over the place, and have to piece it together from many contradictory sources. Hence, scholars develop what are called "critical editions"--editions of ancient texts where scholars or teams of scholars have put tremendous amounts of effort into making a best effort at reconstructing the original text. Seriously, in some cases even deciphering the hand-writing can be difficult.
The best example is the New Testament, where there are literally tens of thousands of manuscripts and fragments of manuscripts dating from the first few centuries. For the most part, they agree, however there are some significant differences. (For a really egregious example, take a look at Mark 16.9ff. in a modern translation, and read the footnotes. Good place to look would be the NET, available online at bible.org). It takes a non-trivial amount of effort to sort through these thousands of manuscripts and variations and decide which one is the "original".
Another good example would be my copy of the works of Origen, a second-third century Christian scholar. Origen fell out of favor in the late third and fourth centuries and a lot of his works were lost. So, his works have not survived in one piece. My edition of Origen has three columns--Latin fragments, where he was quoted by Latin fathers, Greek fragments, where he was quoted by Greek fathers, and an English translation that tries to put it all together. Note that Origen wrote in Greek, so that the Latin fragments are translations of his words, not his original words.
Now, I personally have some serious reservations whether this sort of work is sufficiently original to merit a copyright. But, thus far, it has been concluded that it is. I suppose the real answer would be, "sometimes it is, and sometimes it ain't. But the only way to test it would be to slap the work up on your website and wait to get sued.
"He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
The number of Hindu and Buddhist texts is vast, and some of the oldest on the planet. I wonder if they will get around to digitising these.
Even the raw TIFF seem to be at the incredibly low resolution of 100 DPI. Why would they do this?
Also, why don't the offer the documents in DjVu, like the Internet Archive does?
For Christ's sake... does everything have to be a contest? How does this even map to one and why would you want it to be?
2) It's private property, they can request that you don't take photographs
It's not copyright stopping you.
They can do more than request it; they can require it.
I can see a museum not covering human history, but, aside from natural history, what sort of museum doesn't cover human culture? Is this an alien museum?
due to copyright disputes over clay tablet documents and cave paintings
Copiepresse sued the World Digital Library for infringement.
Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
Book-format (codexes) werent really popular until A.D.
I am guessing because many Jewish temples use scroll-Torahs, that somebody has implemented a "virtual Torah".
The viewer uses Canvas, which is pretty cool, but... if you're doing scaling and panning through a document and are okay with using new technologies then I wonder why they didn't build parts of it with SVG (since that's a way to do zooming & panning pretty naturally).
I don't have much experience with canvas yet, anyone have input?
more of the same on Twitter.
I do not know if they count Egypt in Middle east or north Africa, but it is telling that there are little to no contributions from the ancient Chinese and Indian civilizations, both of whom make Europe and South America look like recent news.
Yup, there is nothing east of Mecca.
The relevant court case (at least for US law, and possibly for UK law) is "Bridgeman v. Corel". Quoting WP:
Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp., 36 F. Supp. 2d 191 (S.D.N.Y. 1999), was a decision by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, which ruled that exact photographic copies of public domain images could not be protected by copyright because the copies lack originality. Even if accurate reproductions require a great deal of skill, experience and effort, the key element for copyrightability under U.S. law is that copyrighted material must show sufficient originality.
I think that many of the original artists were royalty.
Talk about old news..
Sorry, sorry.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
Do not confuse quantity with quality; also recognize the results of theft by European conquerors in the quantity of materials in European hands that originated in the Middle East and other places. I am more familiar with the Western literary tradition, so I will use as examples the multiple books of the Hebrew Bible, the Dead sea scrolls (some of which are not in the Bible), the early Christian writings, the Talmud, and lots of Islamic works - all of which are of Middle Eastern origin.
If I am not for myself, then who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? If not now, when?
In the United States, photographs of flat items do not gain any new copyright.
This means that if the original fell into the public domain thousands of years ago, any modern photograph has no protection in the United States. According to a recent court ruling, once an item has entered the public domain, it cannot later be removed from the public domain, notwithstanding any laws or treaties to the contrary.
Any country that has a problem with that is free to try to keep such photographs out of US borders. Good luck with that.
Now, composite photographs and photographs of 3-dimensional items are eligible for copyright protection, as there is some artistic work involved. "Merely" carefully unrolling a scroll and doing the very tedious work of getting it flat and ready to be photographed does not entitle anyone to copyright protection under US law.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
wikimedia commons goes into much detail, that a 2d reproduction of a public domain work is also public domain. it is different from a 3d work... in that there is no 'creativity' involved in scanning a 2-d work, so the copyright remains that of the original work, not the person who scanned the 2d document.
so, this pretty much covers all 2 dimensional documents in a country like the USA, germany, etc.
but you never know what the dictator in egypt might decide... so there ya go.
Someone please mod this damned bigot down to the depths of hell where he belongs?
Why not accuse the South American Indians of the same thing? Or the tribes in Paupau New Guinea?
It's always the blacks. Always trying to run them down for some reason.
Trying to become famous by taking photos. Visit my homepage please.
Or maybe it's up to 95 by now, but certainly not until then.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
If the money supply is constant, interest rates simply have to be zero on average (unless people don't expect to be honouring them, which is unsustainable pretty quickly, or you're thinking of some bartering system). You're right that still allows them to be nonzero locally, but since they would have to be negative in some parts to compensate, the people who "earned" negative interest would have to be forced to do so.