Gee, and I heard that in the same session that the Supreme Court has
decided that all publicly-funded institutions goes against the original
founders promise of freedom from government intervention (the little known
first and a half amendment) and that they are all being turned over to
private investors. From now all, all public colleges will be known as Jobs
University (The Fighting Macs) and libraries will be called The Donald's
Place of Things we Don't Read.

Oh. I'm sorry, is it the 2nd already?

Dennis

On Sun, Apr 1, 2012 at 11:12 PM, Deg Farrelly <deg.farre...@asu.edu> wrote:

> FYI
>
> Anyone else receive this or hear anything about this ruling?
>
> -deg
>
> deg farrelly
> ASU Libraries
> Arizona State University
> P.O. Box 871006
> Tempe, Arizona  85287-1006
> 480.965.1403
>
> ________________________________________
> Sent:   Sunday, April 1, 2012 9:45 AM
> To:     Deg Farrelly
>
> Breaking News Alert
> The New York Times
> Sunday, April 1, 2012 -- 12:31 PM EDT
> -----
>
> Supreme Court rules on copyright for educational video
>
> In a surprise ruling the Supreme Court has determined that educational use
> of commercial video by means of streaming services falls within the
> face-to-face teaching exemption (Section 110) of U.S. copyright law.  Based
> on arguments in the AIME v UCLA lawsuit, this ruling provides educational
> institutions permission to digitize and stream videos from any source,
> provided those materials were legally acquired.
>
> Read More:
> http://tinyurl.com/nytimes-supreme-court-on-video
>
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> VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of
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> libraries and related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as
> an effective working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of
> communication between libraries,educational institutions, and video
> producers and distributors.
>



-- 
Best regards,
Dennis Doros
Milestone Film & Video/Milliarium Zero
PO Box 128
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VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

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