Well, it’s official: The University of Texas at Austin Libraries has launched our documentary blog for our public domain and orphan works project, free*the*books. We invite you to view and post comments! Our new blog is focused on our research about international copyright laws that control the use and distribution of digitized books online.
As a Google Library Partner, UT Libraries will digitize over a million books from its rich collections within the next six years. Digitization of 800,000 books in the Benson Latin American Collection began in June of this year followed by this companion project to develop an authoritative process for determining the copyright status of books published in various Latin American countries and to identify foreign works in the public domain.
We have found little guidance to help us reliably identify which of our books are already in the public domain so we are piloting a project to develop new tools for ourselves and for anyone who wants to tackle these difficult public domain problems. We will document our process, our progress and our results on the blog’s pages along with links to web resources we find useful.
The initial pages of the blog include online resources to determine critical author birth and death data, prototypes of legal evidence tables and draft guidelines by which books, wherever published, may be determined to be in the public domain
We will be adding features, more pages and new posts to the blog on a regular basis and from time to time will also have guest contributors to add variety and fresh perspectives. We invite suggestions and comments from other Google Library Partners and anyone undertaking similar or related projects.
Email us at freethebooks@gmail.com or IM us at our Meebo widget in the sidebar of the blog. We are here; we are building an evidence base and we are looking for virtual partners!

Comments (2)
This is terrific! Georgia, I would like to talk with you about OCLC's project to create a registry of copyright evidence and how we can collaborate. Our project will create a place to search for, create and share evidence of copyright investigations and link the information with WorldCat records. I see this as another layer of WorldCat. We are interested in talking with anyone wishing to share their information with others. There will also be decision support tools offered.
Bill Carney, OCLC
Posted by Bill Carney | December 13, 2007 10:08 AM
Posted on December 13, 2007 10:08
Is it me or is the URL for the new blog really not in this post? (could be me and my cold...)
Posted by Jill Hurst-Wahl | December 14, 2007 3:25 PM
Posted on December 14, 2007 15:25