• Catfish
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    3 months ago

    In many cases you actually can scan things, and potentially share them. There are many loopholes in the Aust Copyright Act, and different ones in those of other countries. Your local library will have an ILL service, an academic library (if you have access) ought have an excellent one. There will likely be fees, but absolutely anything not too fragile to handle can be made available.

    • melbaboutown
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      3 months ago

      Sounds like a massive organisational job for someone like me who can barely run their own life. I’m more thinking about the things I already own.

      The art books, a few computer books, craft and sewing books… growing up there was a classic recipe book called Australian Cookery and the Vogue Book of sewing but they may be gone now. I had some rare cds but one was lost in a hasty move and another was stolen 🙄

      I’ll have to look at the laws but I’m so risk averse because I don’t have the money for a lawyer and would be hit hard if my internet was cut off.

      I wish it was just legally ok to upload things to allow fair access and ensure they weren’t lost… culture, resources, basic skills.

      Yes, resources and basic skills. Information on the internet is becoming less verifiable and influencers are gating stuff behind paywalls.

        • melbaboutown
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          3 months ago

          Archiving? That’s cool!

          I’m just saying I’m intimidated about working out the loopholes and the amount of organisation to do it in an informal setting. I’m caught in a space where I recognise the value but am struggling to contribute.

          And criticising the way of things where corporations hoard like dragons

          • Catfish
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            3 months ago

            Otherside, I don’t scan, I write the code that lets you find they exist.

            Many research grants now require the outcomes to be free and public. Open Access is growing, but somebody still has to pay at some point.