with the appropriate authorities.
Peter B. Hirtle
Alumni Fellow, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, Harvard University
peter.hir...@cornell.edu
Copyright and Cultural Institutions: Guidelines for Digitization for U.S.
Libraries, Archives, and Museums:
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/14142
been quite a while since I thought about the definition of "publishing of
an artwork".. has there been any case law updates that refine the definition?
Rich
On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 9:21 AM, Peter B. Hirtle <p...@cornell.edu> wrote:
> Remember that only unpublished works by
basis.
Peter B. Hirtle, FSAA
Affiliate Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Harvard University
peter_hir...@harvard.edu
phir...@cyber.law.harvard.edu
peter.hir...@cornell.edu
http://vivo.cornell.edu/display/individual23436
Copyright and Cultural Institutions: Guidelines for Digitiza
and so haven't decided whether its
conclusions go far enough. I'd be interested in the opinion of others.
Peter B. Hirtle, FSAA
Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet Society, Harvard University
Senior Policy Advisor, Cornell University Library
peter_hir...@harvard.edumailto:peter_hir...@harvard.edu
a simple archivist.
Peter B. Hirtle, FSAA
Research Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet Society, Harvard University
Senior Policy Advisor, Cornell University Library
peter_hirtle at harvard.edu
phirtle at cyber.law.harvard.edu
peter.hirtle at cornell.edu
t.? 607.592.0684
http://vivo.cornell.edu
Alike 3.0 Unported
License and the GNU Free Documentation License.
Cheers,
ken
Kenneth Hamma
Yale Center for British Art
kenneth.hamma at yale.edu
On May 27, 2013, at 7:05 AM, Peter B. Hirtle pbh6 at cornell.edu wrote:
For a different perspective from a different field, MCN-L
For a different perspective from a different field, MCN-L readers might be
interested in a forthcoming paper from John Overholt addressing the future of
special collections in libraries. It is called Five theses on the future of
special collections, and a preprint is found at
to Library images. Images from other
Cornell units (including the Museum) may still have restrictions.
Peter B. Hirtle
Senior Policy Advisor and Fellow, Society of American Archivists
Digital Scholarship Services
Cornell University Library
2B53 Kroch Library?
Ithaca, NY
Amalyah Keshet wrote:
?Just curious: If a work by Matisse had been purchased for MoMA from Matisse
or his dealer *in France*, would the Pushman Doctrine still have applied? I
suspect that French law would think otherwise. Did the Doctrine apply only to
works purchased in the US??
That is
, available for sale on Amazon or as a free PDF download
at http://hdl.handle.net/1813/14142.
Peter B. Hirtle
Senior Policy Advisor
Digital Scholarship Services
Cornell University Library
2B53 Kroch Library?
Ithaca, NY? 14853
peter.hirtle at cornell.edu
t.? 607.255-4033
protected by Federal copyright.
Whether anyone wants to fight with artists and their estates over copyright is
another matter.
Peter B. Hirtle
if you have terms governing the use of the reproductions
elsewhere.
Peter B. Hirtle???
CUL Intellectual Property Officer
Scholarly Resources and Special Collections
Cornell University Library???
221 Olin Library?
Ithaca, NY? 14853
peter.hirtle
risk assessment. Does the artist's estate believe in
asserting copyright, even when none exists? Is it important enough to
you to take them on?
Peter
Peter B. Hirtle
Senior Policy Advisor
Scholarly Resources and Special Collections
Cornell University Library
221 Olin Library
13 matches
Mail list logo