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Copyright Renewal, Copyright Restoration, and the Difficulty of Determining Copyright Status

dc.contributor.authorHirtle, Peter B.
dc.date.accessioned2008-06-07T22:10:11Z
dc.date.available2008-06-07T22:10:11Z
dc.date.issued2008-06-07T22:10:11Z
dc.descriptionD-Lib Magazine 13: 7/8 (July/August 2008) <http://www.dlib.org>en_US
dc.description.abstractIt has long been known that most of the works published from 1923 to 1964 in the US are currently in the public domain. Both non-profit and commercial digital libraries have dreamed of making this material available. Most programs have recognized as well that the restoration of US copyright in foreign works in 1996 has made it impossible for them to offer to the public the full text of most foreign works. What has been overlooked up to now is the difficulty that copyright restoration has created for anyone trying to determine if a work published in the United States is still protected by copyright. This article discusses the impact that copyright restoration of foreign works has had on US copyright status investigations, and offers some of new steps that users must follow in order to investigate the copyright status in the US of any work. It argues that copyright restoration has made it almost impossible to determine with certainty whether a book published in the United States after 1922 and before 1964 is in the public domain. For digital libraries that wish to offer books from this period, they can do so at some risk.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1813/10884
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.subjectCopyrighten_US
dc.subjectCopyright restorationen_US
dc.titleCopyright Renewal, Copyright Restoration, and the Difficulty of Determining Copyright Statusen_US
dc.typepreprinten_US

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