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Library Stuff -
4 days and 10 hours ago
Bloomberg
– “Google Inc.’s partners in China said they have received no information from
the company since it announced it may exit the country, putting their businesses at risk.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 3 hours ago
US Courts
– “The Judicial Conference of the United States today approved key steps to improve
public access to federal courts by increasing the availability of court opinions and expanding
the services and reducing the costs for many users of the Public Access to Electronic Court
Records (PACER)”
More
here
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 3 hours ago
Yale Alumni
Magazine – ““This book belongs to me.” For over five centuries, that
has been the message conveyed by every bookplate, whether printed and hand-tinted for Hildebrand
Brandenburg in 1480 or mass-produced for Barnes & Noble or Amazon. (Yes, they sell
bookplates.) Think of a bookplate as a wedding ring binding the reader to the book, and vice
versa. The symbolism isn’t so far apart: ownership, possession, desire.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 4 hours ago
All Things D – “If Google’s (GOOG) talks with the Chinese government end at
an impasse and the company shutters Google.cn and ramps down its operations in the country, it
best do so properly and according to law. That’s the latest from Beijing, which continues
to threaten and posture amid reports that the search giant is on the brink of closing its Chinese
search engine.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 5 hours ago
San Jose Mercury News
– “Sometime in the near future, a federal judge will decide whether Google can
proceed with its plan to create a digital library and bookstore out of millions of old books
scanned from libraries around the world. Google Book Search has already spawned a class-action
lawsuit, and now, a surge of opposition from scholars, consumer advocates and business
competitors who contend the plan gives Google too much control over a priceless store of
information. The legal issues are complex. But the impact and implications of the plan, which
would create a copyright framework for old books that would persist into the 22nd century, could
be huge, some say.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 6 hours ago
AP –
“A museum tracing the history of Britain’s 300,000-strong Jewish community is
reopening after a 10 million pound ($15 million) expansion. The Jewish Museum calls itself the
only such gallery in London dedicated to a minority group. It includes a large collection of
Jewish ceremonial art as well as interactive displays tracing the history of Jews in Britain from
the 11th century until the present day.
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 6 hours ago
Publishers
Weekly – “Two weeks after Library Journal and School Library Journal were
acquired by Media Source, two other publications serving the library market have been sold. VOYA
(Voice of Youth Advocates), which is aimed at librarians serving young adults, and Teacher
Librarian, the journal for school library professionals, have been acquired by E L Kurdyla
Publishing LLC, a new company formed by publishing and library veteran Edward Kurdyla.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 6 hours ago
USA Today – “He had been one of publishing’s major holdouts. But
best-selling author John Grisham is finally joining the e-book bandwagon. Random House announced
today that all 23 Grisham titles are now available for purchase in the U.S, and Canada,
“wherever e-books are sold.” That includes Amazon’s Kindle Store, the Sony
Reader store and Barnes & Noble.com.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 6 hours ago
High
Point University News – ” In the old days, a card catalog and a microfilm reader
were considered high-tech in terms of tools in the library, but students today need much, much
more – and thanks to ever-growing services in the High Point University
libraries, students have everything they need and more. Case in point? The library is on
Facebook, and students can literally be in touch with the library all day, every day
– a feature that’s new this semester.”
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Library Stuff -
5 days and 7 hours ago
AP – “The Feds are on Facebook. And MySpace, LinkedIn and Twitter, too. U.S. law
enforcement agents are following the rest of the Internet world into popular social-networking
services, going undercover with false online profiles to communicate with suspects and gather
private information, according to an internal Justice Department document that offers a
tantalizing glimpse of issues related to privacy and crime-fighting.”
See also, “EFF
Posts Documents Detailing Law Enforcement Collection of Data From Social Media Sites.”
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