Behind a grand white column-fronted building in San Francisco, once the home to a Christian Scientist church, a group of ...
The San Francisco-based Internet Archive now has federal depository status, joining a network of over 1,100 libraries that archive government documents and make them accessible to the public — even as ...
A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit where music publishers sued the Internet Archive over the Great 78 Project, an ...
SAN FRANCISCO — If you've ever clicked on a hyperlink that's taken you to something called the Wayback Machine to view an old web page, you've been introduced to the Internet Archive. The nonprofit, ...
Several major record labels and rights holders have settled their $621 million copyright infringement suit against the Internet Archive over its efforts to digitize, preserve, and share 78 rpm records ...
The platform gets its federal library designation as part of its mission to keep knowledge accessible for all, says founder Brewster Kahle. The Internet Archive is now a federal depository library, ...
The Internet Archive has settled a $621 million copyright infringement lawsuit with several major labels over its Great 78 vinyl preservation project.
Internet Archive — the no-cost, nonprofit digital library that has become embroiled in the nationwide battle over copyrights and free speech — is now an official source for government documents. SEE ...
A group of record labels claimed in their original complaint that making digital recordings of that music publicly available for free was copyright infringement and resulted in financial loss, calling ...
Last year, the Archive lost an appeal in its ebook lending case, and now it has settled the lawsuit over its Great 78 Project: The Internet Archive’s blog simply says: > As noted in the recent court ...