C.U. Changes E-Reserve Policy to Avoid Lawsuit
Article body: Most students would be shocked to know that their professor had broken the law, and even more surprised to find out that they had witnessed it. But as unlikely as that situation seems,...
View ArticleCornell Library’s Digitization Project Unaffected by Ruling Against Google
Although a U.S. Court of Appeals judge ruled against Google's book digitization project, Cornell's partnership with Google in its own library initiatives will not be affected.read more
View ArticleCornell Library Adopts Orphan Works Project
The Cornell Library announced last month that it will make thousands of "orphan works" digitally accessible.read more
View ArticleCornell Library Sued for Copyright Infringement
Individual authors and authors’ groups around the world are suing Cornell and four other universities, alleging that the universities’ library digitization projects are an illegal infringement of...
View ArticleAlumnus Appeals Copyright Verdict to Supreme Court
The Supreme Court announced Monday that it will hear the appeal of Supap Kirtsaeng ’02, an alumnus who lost a $600,000 suit for copyright infringement in August. Oral arguments are set to begin in the...
View Article‘Watershed’ Ruling on Lawsuit Advances Cornell's Digital Library Project
Closing a lawsuit that could have brought a halt to Cornell scanning and uploading eight million library books to the web, a federal district court ruled last week that the University has the right to...
View ArticleSupreme Court Hears Case Over Textbook Resale
A high-profile Supreme Court case that may redefine the retail market began with an alumnus who resold textbooks manufactured abroad in the U.S. may put a stop to people reselling goods they own.read more
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