Thanks, Mr. Baier! Hope everything's warm and sunny in Michigan.
On Wed, Feb 5, 2014 at 4:29 PM, wrote:
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Congrats!
- Reply message -
From: "Elizabeth Sheldon"
To:
Subject: [Videolib] Kino Lorber Hires Jeff Tamblyn, Formerly of New Day Films,
to Head-up Education Division
Date: Wed, Feb 5, 2014 1:55 pm
Kino Lorber Hires Jeff Tamblyn, Formerly of New Day Films, To Head-up Education
Div
Well you will inevitably get different types of contracts for streaming
film. I know I sound like a broken record but only a relatively small
number of films can really be purchased with lifetime streaming which I
know libraries would love. Nearly all fiction feature films either have
contracts tha
I would add that most of our e-book packages are similar to our streaming video
packages like Alexander Street Press. They tend to be subscription packages,
and the content is not really guaranteed for life. Not that this happens often
with ASP, but with our e-book packages there have been man
Kino Lorber Hires Jeff Tamblyn, Formerly of New Day Films, To Head-up Education
Division
30 Year Veteran Filmmaker/Marketer to Spearhead Company's
Growing Educational Business and Digital Expansion
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NEW YORK, NY – February 5, 2014 - Kino Lorber, Inc., is pleased to
Laura:
I still am unclear what you are really asking.
I don't know about e-book licensing, I only do media.
I have developed my own template for a streaming license. It can be
amended by the Vendor to suit their particular situation.
It provides me with consistency in wording and makes conforming
That is totally correct. You can use a little common sense in these issues.
Things sold by Warner Bros are not going to be bootlegs, but DVD-R of a
title there is no legal copy in print ( it was only issued in VHS in the
US) clearly is. In fact it would be illegal if it were "regular" DVD
because
I do just want to add, though, that not all DVD-R's are illegal copies. If
you've bought anything from the Warner Brothers archive you'll know what I'm
talking about.
Cheers,
Matt
__
Matt Ball
Media and Collections Librarian
Clemons Library
University of Virginia
m
It also sounded like it was for the students to take home so again I
suspect most of them can play region 2.
On Wed, Feb 5, 2014 at 12:12 PM, Kankiewicz, Michael
wrote:
>
>
>
>
> If you have a computer in your setup, the free VLC Media Player will play
> most DVDs.
>
>
>
> http://www.videolan.or
Dusty,
Yes, this situation seemed to be the right thing to get that conversation
re-started here. I think it's a very reasonable asset to purchase and I'm
sure this will sort out most of these issues moving forward. Thanks for the
reply. Best regards.
Josh
On Wed, Feb 5, 2014 at 9:51 AM, Haller
It doesn't matter if almost all your DVDs are Region 1. Region 1 and Region 2
(all regions, in fact) DVDs can BOTH be played on an all-region player. That's
why it's "all-region". They're not very expensive. You can probably get a good
one for $100 or less. If you get one with a built-in conver
Well good luck. Needing the material to be legal is kind of basic so I
don't know if it gets spelled out in general guidelines BUT it is all over
the place in copyright LAW. Here is section 1 of the "face to face"
teaching exemption ( sect 110)
(1) performance or display of a work by instructors o
If you have a computer in your setup, the free VLC Media Player will play most
DVDs.
http://www.videolan.org/
---
Michael Kankiewicz
Manager, Silverman Multimedia Center
Jessica,
Yes, you've hit every nail on the head in terms of my concerns. There's
nothing I'd disagree with in your reply and I hope you didn't think I was
trying to get around the issue. I was more looking for something
authoritative I could send to the professor other than the Librarian's word
as
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