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Stanford launches Copyright Renewal Database
News Release - April 2, 2007
Stanford launches Copyright Renewal Database
Copyright Renewal Database <http://collections.stanford.edu/determinator/>
An online database that enables people to search
copyright-renewal records for books published in the United
States between 1923 and 1963 has been launched by Stanford
University Libraries and Academic Information Resources (SULAIR).
SULAIR developed the Copyright Renewal Database, dubbed the
"Copyright Determinator," with a grant from the Hewlett
Foundation. The effort built on Project Gutenberg's
transcriptions of the Catalog of Copyright Entries, which was
published by the U.S. Copyright Office. (Project Gutenberg at
<http://www.gutenberg.org/> produces free electronic books.)
"This database is an important tool for anyone researching the
copyright status of U.S. works," said Stanford attorney Lauren
Schoenthaler. "Having a single, electronic source for all
renewals for these works will greatly speed the research
process."
Determining the copyright status of books has become a pressing
issue as libraries and businesses develop plans to digitize
materials and make works in the public domain widely available.
In order to appropriately select books for digitization, these
organizations need to determine efficiently and with some
certainty the copyright status of each work in a large
collection. The Determinator supports this process, bringing all
1923-1963 book-renewal records together in a single database and,
more significantly, making searchable renewal records that had
previously been distributed only in print.
U.S. works published from 1923 to 1963 are the only group of
works for which renewal is now a concern. Renewals have expired
for works published before 1923, and they are generally in the
public domain. The 1976 Copyright Act made renewal automatic for
works published after Jan. 1, 1964. Determining the renewal
status of works published between 1923 and 1963 has been a
challenge; the Copyright Office received renewals as early as
1950, but only records received by that office after 1977 are
available in electronic form. Renewals received between 1950 and
1977 were announced and distributed only in a semi-annual print
publication. For the Determinator databases, Stanford has
converted the print records to machine-readable form and combined
them with the electronic renewal records from the Copyright
Office.
SULAIR continues to refine the database and welcomes feedback.
http://news-service.stanford.edu/pr/2007/pr-copy-040407.html
Mimi Calter
Executive Assistant to the University Librarian
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6004
voice: +1-650-725-5813
fax: +1-650-725-4902
e-mail: mcalter@stanford.edu