public.resource.org - 0 views
The Practical Archivist: Ask the Archivist: Torn Book Cover - 0 views
AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors: <i>Evidence Explained</i>: A Book Review - 0 views
The Lightner Museum - 0 views
Dot - Daily Diary - 0 views
GenealogyMagazine.com - 0 views
Transylvanian Dutch: Wikipedia - Part II: Editing Wikipedia - 0 views
Transylvanian Dutch: Wikipedia - Part I: Using Wikipedia for Research - 0 views
FamHist: Free Unlimited Online Image Storage - 0 views
Copyright Crash Course - 0 views
GeneaBlogie: Book Review (Somewhat): Some Family - 0 views
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The author, Donald Harman Akenson, is a highly regarded historian, who has written extensively about the history of Judaism and Christianity. He is said to be the world's foremost authority on the Irish diaspora. In Some Family, he seeks to examine various systems of "genealogical narratives" throughout history and across cultures. His thesis seems to be that presently the system of genealogical recordkeeping selected by the LDS Church is becoming dominant. That's not such a surprising conclusion, but Akenson seems to warn against any one system dominating genealogy because any One Great Big System (as he would say) would fail to take into account the culturally-driven systems that otherwise exist. Akenson says that systems employed by genealogists must be consistent with "empirical, historical, and statistical reality."
Creative Heritage Project: IP Guidelines for Documenting, Recording and Digitizing Inta... - 0 views
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Digital technologies and the Internet offer unprecedented opportunities for the promotion, preservation, revitalization and protection of intangible cultural heritage, such as traditional music, art, performances, symbols and designs. Many valuable initiatives are using these new technologies to record, digitize and disseminate databases of these traditional cultural expressions. However, the digitization and wider dissemination of traditional cultural expressions can lead to their misappropriation and misuse. For example, cultural heritage safeguarding efforts have sometimes unwittingly led to the unauthorized commercial exploitation of culturally sensitive materials. As a result, indigenous organizations, museums and archives, and cultural researchers have called for guidance on which IP issues and options arise during recording and digitization initiatives. In response, the WIPO Creative Heritage Project is developing best practices and guidelines for managing IP issues when recording, digitizing and disseminating intangible cultural heritage. The project also comprises: IT assistance, in the form of technical support for the recording and digitization of traditional cultural expressions, and the establishment of digital collections and websites; and the WIPO Creative Heritage Digital Gateway, through which samples of the world's diverse traditional cultural expressions can be experienced.
DearMYRTLE: Where DOES one put those research reports? - 0 views
Libel and Fair Use and Defamation, Oh My! - 0 views
An editor critiques the publishing industry's Automated Content Access Protocol - 0 views
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The "Automated Content Access Protocol (ACAP) is a new technical venture by an international consortium of publishers, and a proposed technical solution to the tug of war between publishers and intermediaries such as search engines and news aggregation sites. This article goes into some detail about ACAP and offers both a technical and a philosophical context for judging its impact and chances of success.
Digitization 101: Mass Digitization -- changing copyright law and policy - 0 views
Family Matters » » Taking Notes - 0 views
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