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Copyright And Related Issues Relevant To Digital Preservation And Dissemination Of Unpublished Pre-1972 Sound Recordings By Libraries And Archives by National Recording Preservation Board (U...

Book Information

TitleCopyright And Related Issues Relevant To Digital Preservation And Dissemination Of Unpublished Pre-1972 Sound Recordings By Libraries And Archives
CreatorNational Recording Preservation Board (U.S.), Besek, June M.
Year2009-03
PPI300
Pages93
PublisherWashington, D.C. : Council on Library and Information Resources : Library of Congress
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectCopyright, CLIR publication, Sound recordings -- Digitization -- Law and legislation -- United States, Copyright -- Sound recordings -- United States, Copyright and digital preservation -- United States, OTR
Collectionfolkscanomy_miscellaneous, folkscanomy, additional_collections
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IdentifierCopyrightAndRelatedIssuesRelevantToDigitalPreservationAndDisseminationOfUnpublis
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Description

CLIR pub 144. Commissioned for and sponsored by the National Recording Preservation Board, Library of Congress. "This report addresses the question of what libraries and archives are legally empowered to do to preserve and make accessible for research their holdings of unpublished pre-1972 sound recordings. The report's author, June M. Besek, is executive director of the Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts at Columbia Law School.Unpublished sound recordings are those created for private use, or even for broadcast, but that have not been distributed to the public in copies with the right holder's consent. Examples include tapes of live musical performances or of interviews conducted as part of field research or news gathering. Such recordings may find their way into library and archive collections through donations or purchase. Some may be the only record of a particular performance or event, and therefore may have considerable cultural and historical significance. The rights for use of unpublished recordings are distinct from those for use of commercial sound recordings, which are made with the authorization of rights holders and are intended for reproduction and sale to the public.Using examples of specific types of sound recordings, the Besek study (1) describes the different bodies of law that protect pre-1972 sound recordings, (2) explains the difficulty in defining the precise contours of the law, and (3) provides guidance for libraries evaluating their activities with respect to unpublished pre-1972 sound recordings."