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<DIV><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2><FONT color=#000000 size=3>In
Challenge to Google, Yahoo Will Scan Books<BR>New York Times (10/03/05) P. C1;
Hafner, Katie </FONT>
<P>The goal of the Yahoo-led Open Content Alliance (OCA) is to digitize hundreds
of thousands of books and technical papers and put them online for anyone to
access. The project stands to rival Google's effort to create a searchable
archive of library collections, but without running the risk of copyright
violation, because the OCA will initially concentrate on digitizing works in the
public domain. Furthermore, the alliance is seeking permission from copyright
holders and is making works available via a Creative Commons license, where the
copyright holder sets usage conditions. In another break from the Google
project, OCA's digitized works will be accessible to any search engine. Among
the organizations and institutions participating in the OCA is the Internet
Archive, which will perform the actual digitization and archival of books. The
University of California, meanwhile, will contribute up to $500,000 to the
project in its first year and scan 5,000 volumes of early American fiction
initially; an additional 5,000 to 15,000 volumes will be scanned within the next
year. "Our approach is very collection-focused, to seed meaningful collections
and get other libraries around the world to do the same," says UC California
Digital Library librarian Dr. Daniel Greenstein.<BR></P></FONT></DIV>
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