
NEWS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATE:
CONTACT : Barbara G. Preece, Executive Director
Boston
Library Consortium, Inc.
(617)
262-6244
to
Provide Public Access to Digitized Books
The Consortium will offer high-resolution,
downloadable, reusable files of public domain materials. Using Internet Archive
technology, books from all 19 libraries will be scanned at a cost of just 10
cents per page. Collectively, the BLC
member libraries provide access to over 34 million volumes.
The BLC <http://www.blc.org/index.html>is
an association of academic and research libraries located in Massachusetts,
Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, dedicated to sharing human and
information resources to advance the research and learning of its constituency.
Founded in 1970, the Consortium supports resource sharing and enhancement of
services to users through programs in cooperative collecting, access to
electronic resources and physical collections, and enhanced interlibrary loan
and document delivery.
The members of the BLC are Boston College, Boston Public Library,
Boston University, Brandeis University, Brown University, the Marine Biological Laboratory & Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution, MIT, Northeastern University,
the State Library of Massachusetts,
Tufts University, University of Connecticut, University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of Massachusetts Boston, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, University of
Massachusetts Lowell, University of
Massachusetts Medical Center, University of New
Hampshire, Wellesley College,
and Williams College.
According to Doron
Weber, Program Director, Universal Access to Recorded Knowledge, at the Alfred
P. Sloan Foundation, “The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which has supported the
Open
Content
responsibility and manage this historic
transition to a universal digital archive that serves the needs of scholars,
researchers and the general public without compromise. Bravo for the BLC and
the Open Content
The Open Content Alliance (OCA) <http://www.opencontentalliance.org/>
represents the collaborative efforts of a group of cultural, technology,
nonprofit, and governmental organizations
from around the world that will help build a permanent archive of multilingual
digitized text and multimedia content.
The BLC’s Executive Director, Barbara G. Preece commented, “The
Boston Library Consortium is excited about its partnership with the Open
Content Alliance and its members. The Consortium believes that this
collaboration is the living articulation of the BLC’s
view to expand access to its rich resources held by the membership. The BLC/OCA
project will ensure that materials digitized will remain free and open to
scholars and the public.”
The Internet
Archive is a 501(c)(3) non-profit that was founded in 1996 to build an Internet
library, with the purpose of offering permanent access for researchers,
historians, and scholars to historical collections that exist in digital
format. According to Brewster Kahle, digital
librarian and founder of the Internet Archive, “Fortunately many great
libraries are weighing the alternatives and choosing to go open instead of
putting public domain material under perpetual restrictions.” The BLC’s digitized books will be hosted by the Internet
Archive and available to be indexed by any search engine following the BLC and OCA’s philosophy of open access to digitized content.
The scanning
center at the heart of the BLC/OCA partnership is located at the Boston Public
Library. President of the BPL Bernard
Margolis said, “The Boston Public Library is pleased to host this innovative
collaborative effort. It is exciting to see the application of the latest
in digital scanning technology of the Internet Archive to the enormous task of
converting the rich book collections of the BLC libraries for easy access by
people around the world. We are, in the most basic and important meaning
of the word, “enriching” the world. As we open these books we give opportunity
for their use in many new and expanding ways for new and expanding audiences.
We are doing what libraries as supposed to do.”
Cathy Norton,
Director, Marine Biological Laboratory & Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution Library noted, “The opening of the Northeast Regional
Scanning Center in the Boston Public Library will make possible
the digitization of these great academic collections in a
consortial, collaborative, community environment that will add to
the knowledge base of humanity via the Internet.”