Good question.
The direct quote from Head of Digital Scholarship is "Overriding any type of 
copyright protection is a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, 
even if doing so is not an infringement of copyright."

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sarah E. McCleskey
Sent: Tuesday, May 19, 2015 11:46 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Videolib] Have permission to copy VHS series to DVD--but cannot 
locate a copy-able tape!

I don't understand why overriding the copy protection would be illegal when you 
have permission from the copyright holder???

Sarah


Sarah E. McCleskey
Head of Access Services, Film and Media
112 Axinn Library
123 Hofstra University
Hempstead, NY 11549
516-463-5076
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kathy Edwards
Sent: Tuesday, May 19, 2015 11:05 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [Videolib] Have permission to copy VHS series to DVD--but cannot 
locate a copy-able tape!

Here's our quandary:
Our university library owns the series Nature Perfected: The Story of the 
Garden, made in 1995. It's a six-volume set on VHS and not available on DVD or 
in any other format, to the best of my knowledge.

Two of our landscape architecture profs want to continue using these tapes, but 
the tapes are wearing out. We sought and received permission from the copyright 
owner, William Howard Adams, to transfer the content to DVD. He even asked us 
to send him copies on DVD, since he only owned his own series on videotape.

Conversion went well for five of the six tapes, but volume 2 was already too 
worn and stretched-the DVD was useless, as it the tape.

We purchased a replacement for the VHS of volume 2 only to discover that the 
tape is copy-protected-cannot be copied to DVD on any machine we own. There is 
a lab on campus that may be able to bypass the copy protection, but our Digital 
Scholarship librarian says "No-overriding the protection is illegal."

So I asked Mr Adams to send us his VHS tape of volume 2, in hopes that it could 
be copied (after all, copying our originals was easy-no protections in place on 
those).  Turns out his VHS copy is ALSO copy-protected.

It's ridiculous to be in the position of having to shop for a non-protected 
copy of a tape we already own, especially since our original copy did not 
present this problem.

What's the quickest/easiest solution to obtaining a legal DVD of this volume in 
the series?
Are we doing something obviously dumb and dense, that we haven't figured this 
out? In which case, please reply off-list! (Mr Adams will also be grateful, if 
he gets his own DVD copy out of our efforts.)

TIA,


Kathy Edwards
Research & Collection Development Librarian
Emery A. Gunnin Architecture Library
Clemson University
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
(864) 656-4289
[CUsigIcon]


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