Hi Farhad,

The webinar will be archived for those who cannot attend.  I don't have a
direct URL for the archive, but it looks like a story will post on ALA's
District Dispatch once the webinar is available:
http://www.districtdispatch.org/?s=archived+webinars

All best,
Brian.

Brian Boling
Media Services Librarian
Temple University Libraries
[email protected]
Schedule a meeting during my office hours
<http://paleystudy.temple.edu/appointment/8617>

On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 12:23 PM, Moshiri, Farhad <[email protected]> wrote:

> Would there be a recording of the webinar for those who cannot attend?
> Thanks.
>
>
> Farhad Moshiri, MLS
>
> Audiovisual  Librarian
>
> University of the Incarnate Word
>
> 4301 Broadway – CPO 297
>
> San Antonio, TX 78209
>
> (210) 829-3842
> ------------------------------
> *From:* [email protected] <videolib-bounces@lists.
> berkeley.edu> on behalf of Brian W Boling <[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, January 4, 2017 9:15 AM
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* [Videolib] Copytalk Webinar on Section 108 Video Project
>
> Apologies for duplication, but wanted to remind you of a webinar of
> interest to this list that has been re-scheduled for tomorrow, January 5th
> at 2pm EST/11am PST.
>
> Newly retired deg farrelly will be presenting on the Section 108
> cooperative database developed by himself, Chris Lewis, and Jane Hutchinson.
>
> All best,
> Brian Boling.
> CopyTalk webinar: Section 108 video project
>
> Starting in the late 1970s academic libraries built collections of VHS
> titles with an emphasis on supporting classroom teaching. On average,
> academic libraries have more than 3,000 VHS tapes.
>
> Eclipsed by robust and rapid adoption of DVDs, the VHS era is now over.
> But a crisis is welling for libraries. Of the hundreds of thousands of VHS
> recordings commercially released, a substantial number never were released
> on DVD or in streaming format. To compound matters, industry experts
> estimate that various forces converge against VHS (age of tapes,
> irreparable and irreplaceable equipment, retirement of VHS technicians)
> ultimately making the format inaccessible by 2027.
>
> Under Section 108 of U.S. Copyright law, libraries have an available
> remedy to this problem. The law allows duplication of some items if prior
> to duplication, a reasonable search determined that an unused copy of the
> title is not available.
>
> This session presents a cooperative database, established to capture the
> search efforts for current distribution of VHS video titles, and to
> identify titles eligible for duplication under Section 108.
>
> Our speaker will be deg farrelly, who has been a media librarian for 40
> years, the last 25 at Arizona State University. He has played instrumental
> roles at multiple companies in the development of streaming video
> collections and licensing, including the first PDA, the first subscription
> and the first EBA models. Co-investigator of two national studies, The
> Survey of Academic Library Streaming Video
> <http://www.against-the-grain.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/spec_rpt_farrelly_hutchison_v26-5.pdf>
> (2013) and Academic Library Streaming Video Revisited
> <https://repository.asu.edu/attachments/171416/content/Survey%20of%20Academic%20Library%20Streaming%20Video%20Revisited.pdf>
>  (2015),
> farrelly writes and presents frequently on issues related to streaming
> video.
>
> *Thursday, January 5th at 2pm Eastern/11am Pacific for our hour long free
> webinar. Join us!*
>
> *Go to http://ala.adobeconnect.com/copytalk/
> <http://ala.adobeconnect.com/copytalk/> and sign in as a guest. You’re in. *
>
> This  free webinar program is brought to you by OITP’s copyright education
> subcommittee. Space is limited, but all CopyTalk webinars are archived.
> Brian Boling
> Media Services Librarian
> Temple University Libraries
> [email protected]
> Schedule a meeting during my office hours
> <http://paleystudy.temple.edu/appointment/8617>
>
> ------------------------------
>
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