Policies like this really bother me.

First, it is easier for many libraries to purchase a feature film from Midwest 
than something like Amazon.  In Virginia, for example, we have a very 
restricted state procurement system which very much expects us to buy from 
contract vendors (Midwest being one). In my individual situation, if the 
content is not "sole source," it really is much harder for me to buy content 
from other sources than Midwest.

Second, perhaps more importantly, I resent a reasonably large company 
essentially trying to license material that should fall under the rights and 
responsibilities of copyrighted content.  Warner Brothers is not the ordinary 
academic distributor: they are not going to "make or break" on the first sale 
privileges that libraries exist upon and holding a film for 28 days is not 
going to make the person who depends upon the library go to Blockbuster or 
Redbox.  What I think decisions like Warner Brothers imply is that they don't 
want the library of the future (or perhaps even a current library) to loan 
feature film content.  What is going to happen when we really cannot count on 
copyright anymore, when all of our media is licensed, when all of films are 
streamed?  I am really afraid that libraries are become second class citizens 
of content delivery: we won't choose the content, the content/the distributor, 
will choose to choose us.

Anyway... I'm writing Warner Brothers a letter, regardless of whether it makes 
a difference or not.

Mary.

PS: I'm really not this brooding in real life.

Mary Hanlin
Media Collection Development Librarian
Tidewater Community College, Portsmouth
120 Campus Drive,
Portsmouth, Virginia 23701
P: 757-822-2133
F: 757-822-2149
[email protected]






-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ledbetter, Terri
Sent: Tuesday, October 11, 2011 1:32 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Videolib] Warner policy change

I truly do hope they will reconsider this. As a public library, our customers 
count on us to have the newest releases on time. Sometimes they even ask for 
them when they're still in theaters...



Terri Beth Ledbetter

Hartford Public Library

500 Main Street

Hartford, CT 06103

860-695-6370

860-722-6870 (fax)




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