You are correct on one point: I should be (and I am) irritated at 
NARA for its inaction in making these materials widely available.  
That content is ours: yours, mine and everyone's.  That's part of my 
motivation for making the video and disseminating the methods you can 
use to gain access to your cultural heritage. It's naive to think 
that Google gets no benefit from digitizing and serving these 
materials.  If they were doing it as a public service then they would 
make the material available in an open source, freely available, 
editable format.  They've gone to extra expense to fence it off.  The 
reason they're keeping it in a proprietary format is because they see 
profit in doing so, both presently and in the future.  At present 
they benefit from increased traffic, so your assertion that "they are 
losing money" is not proven.  And, besides, they're not making the 
material available, they're making it viewable.  Unless you use the 
methods outlined in my cartoon or some form of screenscraping, those 
materials aren't available to you for your use, they're only viewable 
by you, through the Google player or on the Google website.  And I 
remind you that the content we're discussing is public domain.  It 
belongs to everyone.  I think it's justifiable to get angry at a 
giant corporation for appropriating a public asset, especially since 
the corporation in question, Google, has gone to great lengths to 
advertise itself as a humane, benevolent, progressive company, a 
guardian of our digital rights and well being.  

--- In [email protected], "Joey Profit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Not to play devils advocate (but I'm going to) your anger at google
> seems unjustified.  I'm not sure what hoops you have to jump through
> to gain access to a file or video in the NARA but I'm willing to bet
> there is a cost associated with retrieving said information.  Even 
if
> it's as simple as paying a guy or gal to pull the tape off a rack.
> Should the archive itself pay those fees? Maybe.  They probably make
> you jump through hoops as a deterrent.  I'm willing to bet that 
google
> pays a fee to obtain copies of those films.  Or has hired lawyers 
and
> others to jump through the hoops.  That being said who are you to
> dictate how google retransmits that data.  Google isn't making any
> money off of putting that video up on Google Video.  In fact, if
> anything they are losing money just by making it available in the
> first place. Bandwidth costs etc.  So who should you be upset with?
> probably the NARA for not putting the content on line and free for
> people to download.
> 
> On 23/01/07, David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hey all.  My recent cartoon called "Screw Google" may help 
someone who
> > is trying to find a method to download and edit Google, Youtube 
and
> > other videos.  It's available on blip at: 
http://blip.tv/file/134228 or
> > on my blogger site: hassleheadnews.blogspot.com.  The idea behind 
the
> > video is this: Google has been digitizing NARA (National Archives 
and
> > Records Administration) videos into a proprietary format.  These
> > materials are public domain and instead of making them broadly
> > available, Google is presenting them in a way that allows us to 
look
> > but not touch.  To get these same materials from NARA you have to 
jump
> > through fiery hoops.  If you don't have a screenscraper, you can 
use
> > the methods presented in the video I referenced above to get 
footage
> > of, say, the Marines raising the American flag on Iwo Jima or any 
other
> > of a hundred thousand Public Domain videos.  It's axiomatic that 
Public
> > Domain material can never be copyrighted by inclusion in another
> > format, so when you convert these videos, the underlying data is 
yours
> > to use.  Hope this contribution is fun and helpful.
> >
> > -David
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
>


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