This article explores the implications of a shift from public to private provision of information through focusing on the relationship between Google and public libraries. This relationship has sparked controversy, with concerns expressed about the integrity of search results, the Google Book project, and Google the company. In this paper, these concerns are treated as symptoms of a deeper divide, the fundamentally different conceptions of information that underpin the stated aim of Google and libraries to provide access to information. The paper concludes with some principles necessary for the survival of public libraries and their contribution to a robust democracy in a rapidly expanding Googleverse
The Google Books and Open Content Alliance (OCA) initiatives have become the poster children of the ...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to illustrate issues surrounding the Google Book settlement i...
To date, Google Books has scanned and made searchable more than 20 million books from library collec...
This article explores the implications of a shift from public to private provision of information th...
The wide spread of the Internet and new information technologies in recent years has come to effec...
This article examines the responsibilities of libraries and librarians as Internet information publi...
“In this pervasive atmosphere of privately acquiring, processing, and selling information, the publi...
This article examines the responsibilities of libraries and librarians as Internet information publi...
Google has undoubtedly influenced our assumptions about research and the dissemination of and access...
Library information resource sharing has traditionally been organized around the physical transfer o...
<p>Slides used for presentation at the Virtual Symposium on Information and Technology in the Arts a...
Libraries collaborate to digitize collections large and small in order to provide information with f...
In recent years, a number of organizations have begun the task of digitizing great numbers of books ...
There is a widespread concern amongst librarians that Google Search and Wikipedia are making library...
As stewards of their collections, libraries have a responsibility to ensure that the digitization ag...
The Google Books and Open Content Alliance (OCA) initiatives have become the poster children of the ...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to illustrate issues surrounding the Google Book settlement i...
To date, Google Books has scanned and made searchable more than 20 million books from library collec...
This article explores the implications of a shift from public to private provision of information th...
The wide spread of the Internet and new information technologies in recent years has come to effec...
This article examines the responsibilities of libraries and librarians as Internet information publi...
“In this pervasive atmosphere of privately acquiring, processing, and selling information, the publi...
This article examines the responsibilities of libraries and librarians as Internet information publi...
Google has undoubtedly influenced our assumptions about research and the dissemination of and access...
Library information resource sharing has traditionally been organized around the physical transfer o...
<p>Slides used for presentation at the Virtual Symposium on Information and Technology in the Arts a...
Libraries collaborate to digitize collections large and small in order to provide information with f...
In recent years, a number of organizations have begun the task of digitizing great numbers of books ...
There is a widespread concern amongst librarians that Google Search and Wikipedia are making library...
As stewards of their collections, libraries have a responsibility to ensure that the digitization ag...
The Google Books and Open Content Alliance (OCA) initiatives have become the poster children of the ...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to illustrate issues surrounding the Google Book settlement i...
To date, Google Books has scanned and made searchable more than 20 million books from library collec...