A copyright question: When I looked at terms of use, they say this site is for 
personal, non-commercial use. I've seen this statement in most sites. What they 
don't say is can the site be used in non-profit educational institutions, in 
classrooms, etc.? The "personal" always make you think you're not allowed to 
use it in class. Any idea?


Farhad Moshiri, MLS
Post-Masters Advanced Study Certificate
Audiovisual  Librarian
Subject areas: Music, Dance, Copyright issues,
Middle Eastern Studies
University of the Incarnate Word
J.E. & L.E. Mabee Library
4301 Broadway - CPO 297
San Antonio, TX 78209
(210) 829-3842









From: videolib-boun...@lists.berkeley.edu 
[mailto:videolib-boun...@lists.berkeley.edu] On Behalf Of Deg Farrelly
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2015 7:12 PM
To: videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
Subject: [Videolib] American Archive of Public Broadcasting Launches With 7, 
000 Programs Available to Stream Online

Apologies for forwarding entire email.... Too much to cherry pick which parts 
to send.

deg farrelly
Media Librarian/Streaming Video Administrator
Arizona State University Libraries
Tempe, AZ  85287-1006
602.332.3103

Subject: Exciting! American Archive of Public Broadcasting Launches With 7,000 
Programs Available to Stream Online


Note: Some very exciting news about a project we've been following for a few 
years and have posted about many times. Links to several background posts are 
found below today's news.

What's new today is that along with a formal launch is that some streaming 
content (approx. 7,000 programs and more to come) is available online via the 
American Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB) database. The database 
itself<http://americanarchive.org/> became available (with metadata only) 
during April 
2015.<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/04/07/american-archive-of-public-broadcasting-launches-new-websitedatabase-streaming-video-coming-this-fall/>

Congrats to the AAPB Team!

>From Today's (October 27, 2015) Launch 
>Announcement:<http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2015/15-194.html>

With contributions from more than 100 public media organizations across the 
country, programs that for decades have gathered dust on shelves are now 
available to stream on the AAPB website.<http://americanarchive.org/> This rich 
collection of programs dating from the 1940s to the 2010s will help tell the 
stories of local communities throughout the nation in the last half of the 20th 
century and first decade of the 21st.

[Clip]

Initially launched in April 2015 with 2.5 million inventory records, the AAPB 
website<http://americanarchive.org/> has added nearly 7,000 audiovisual 
streaming files of historical content from public media stations across the 
country. The Library of Congress, WGBH Boston and the Corporation for Public 
Broadcasting have embarked on an unprecedented initiative to preserve 
historical public television and radio programs of the past 70 years.

The Content

Nearly 40,000 hours, comprising 68,000 digital files, of historical public 
broadcasting content have been preserved. On the website, nearly 7,000 of these 
American public radio and television programs dating back to the 1940s are now 
accessible to the public. These audio and video materials, contributed by more 
than 100 public broadcasting organizations across the country, are an exciting 
new resource to uncover ways that common concerns over the past half-century 
have played out on the local scene. Users are encouraged to check back often, 
as AAPB staff continue to add more content to the website. The entire 
collection of 40,000 hours is available for research on location at WGBH and 
the Library of Congress.

[Clip]

The collection includes interviews and performances by local and national 
luminaries from a broad variety of professions and cultural genres. Just a few 
examples of the items in the collection include: Pacifica Radio Archives' 1956 
interview with Rosa Parks during the Montgomery Bus Boycott; KCTS 9's 1999 live 
broadcast from the opening reception of the World Trade Organization's Seattle 
Summit; and New England Public Radio's 1974 debate between U.S. Rep. Martha 
Griffiths, sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment, and Phyllis Schlafly, the 
main opponent of the ERA.

Read the Complete Launch 
Announcement<http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2015/15-194.html>

Direct to American Archive of Public Broadcasting 
Database<http://americanarchive.org/>

Searching the AAPB

  *   Help: Searching the AAPB Database<http://americanarchive.org/search>

  *   An Advanced Search Interface Page is 
Available<http://americanarchive.org/advanced>

  *   Results can be focused/limited using one or more of the following facets:
     *   Media Type
     *   Genre
     *   Asset Type
     *   Organization
     *   Year
     *   Access (Three Options: View Online Reading Room (Default) All 
Digitized Records, All Records)

Background, Updates, and Resources

  *   Slides From an August 2015 Conference Presentation About the American 
Archive of Public Broadcasting Now Online (August 28, 
2015)<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/08/28/recent-conference-presentation-slides-on-american-archive-of-public-broadcasting-now-online/>

  *   American Archive of Public Broadcasting Launches New Website/Database, 
Streaming Video Coming This Fall (April 7, 
2015)<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/04/07/american-archive-of-public-broadcasting-launches-new-websitedatabase-streaming-video-coming-this-fall/>

  *   Learn More About The American Archive of Public Broadcasting (Conference 
Presentation) (May 24, 
2014)<http://www.infodocket.com/2014/05/24/digital-preservation-conference-presentation-by-the-american-archive-of-public-broadcasting/>

  *   Update and Slide Presentation from the American Archive of Public 
Broadcasting (December 15, 
2013)<http://www.infodocket.com/2013/12/15/an-update-and-slide-presentation-from-the-american-archive-of-public-broadcasting/>

  *   Library of Congress Selected as New Home of American Archive of Public 
Broadcasting (November 14, 
2013)<http://www.infodocket.com/2013/11/14/corporation-for-public-broadcasting-awards-library-of-congress-and-wgbh-with-stewardship-of-the-american-archive-of-public-broadcasting/>

See Also: Direct to American Archive of Public Broadcasting 
Blog<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/04/07/american-archive-of-public-broadcasting-launches-new-websitedatabase-streaming-video-coming-this-fall/>

See Also: Learn About PBCore (Public Television Metadata 
Dictionary)<http://pbcore.org/>

Selection of Other Television Archive Projects (with Video Streamable Online)

  *   C-SPAN Video Library<http://www.c-spanvideo.org/videoLibrary/>

  *   WGBH Open Vault<http://openvault.wgbh.org/>

  *   Boston TV News Digital Archive<http://bostonlocaltv.org/>

  *   Louisiana Digital Media 
Archive<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/01/20/new-online-louisiana-state-archives-and-louisiana-public-television-launch-digital-media-archive/>

  *   University of North Texas Libraries Placing Digitized News Film 
(1950-1979) From NBC 5/ KXAS-TV (Dallas-Fort Worth) on Portal to Texas 
History<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/01/23/university-of-north-texas-placing-news-film-from-nbc-5-kxas-tv-dallas-fort-worth-on-portal-to-texas-history/>

  *   University of Virginia Library Releases Online Archive of Historical TV 
News 
Footage<http://www.infodocket.com/2013/08/05/university-of-virginia-library-releases-online-archive-of-historical-tv-news-footage/>


View 
article...<http://www.infodocket.com/2015/10/27/exciting-american-archive-of-public-broadcasting-launches-with-7000-programs-of-streaming-video-available-online-with-more-to-come/>

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