Yeah I'm really not a dogmatist on this and I've come to dislike the other side of this debate because I think that's where most of the zealots are My take is basically "If there's an active conflict of interest the person who actually made the thing takes priority"https://twitter.com/MikeSchnier/status/1271887263455154176 …
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The reason the IA ruffled feathers on this is that they departed wildly from what people thought the mission of the library was They did not put a mechanism in place to host only old books or out-of-print books, they started putting up all the books they got
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Because they ARE zealots, or at least Brewster Kahle is a zealot The ethos wasn't the "abandonware" ethos anymore - "We're breaking the law but not hurting anybody" It was openly trying to make new law - "This is how e-lending should generally work"
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The agenda pretty clearly wasn't "Let's make old books that are hard to access available" anymore It was "Let's get rid of the ebook licensing system for books currently in print, because we think it's abusive"
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It's looking at existing authors and publishers going "You've already made enough money from print sales, your prices for ebooks in libraries are too high and they're hurting people, we're just not gonna pay them and tell other people not to either"
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You can hold that position if you want to Personally, I have come around to thinking it's a dickish principle to live by, and *especially* dickish to *actually say it to people's face* Especially when you're not playing Robin Hood with academic research but creative work
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Replying to @arthur_affect
I have a lot of sympathy for that position but I wish they'd stop lying about it being their position. If you're a free-information zealot just say that, don't pretend you're a "library" that is allowing "emergency lending".
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Replying to @Diacritic
Well, that's a necessary part of the play though The strategy is specifically to *not* say "We, the Internet Archive, are breaking the law" It's to say "We've researched this concept of Controlled Digital Lending that we think is how online library collections should work"
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"And this is a new protocol that libraries across the country are using because it's an expression of fair use" Which it was, because a lot of libraries hate paying for ebook licenses, which is why publishers were getting so upset
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