A label lawsuit says the organization's "Great 78s" project amounts to just that. And it's hard to see what its defense would be. By Robert Levine Why is the music business picking on Brewster Kahle?
The Internet Archive is facing another lawsuit over one of its conservation projects. Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group and a handful of other music labels have filed a lawsuit against ...
Sony, Universal Music Group and others claim the Internet Archive has reproduced thousands of protected songs without copyright permission. The Internet Archive is facing a massive copyright lawsuit ...
Major record labels are suing the Internet Archive, accusing the nonprofit of “massive” and “blatant” copyright infringement “of works by some of the greatest artists of the Twentieth Century.” The ...
The origins of the online music revolution are back, thanks to internet archivist extraordinaire Jason Scott. Scott, who works for the internet preservation group Archive.org, has resurrected the ...
Chicago music fanatic Aadam Jacobs began recording local shows in the early 80s and kept at it obsessively for more than 30 years. He’s never sought to monetize this work, though artists have ...
If you step into the headquarters of the Internet Archive on a Friday after lunch, when it offers public tours, chances are you’ll be greeted by its founder and merriest cheerleader, Brewster Kahle.
Online live music collection Live Music Archive has rolled over more than 250,000 concert recordings, all available to listen to for free. First launched in 2002, Live Music Archive collects lossless ...
The Internet Underground Music Archive (IUMA) was nearly lost forever when it shut down in 2006, but it lives again thanks to EFF co-founder John Gilmore and Jason Scott of Textfiles.com. The Internet ...
MTV News lives! Well, sort of. In the days after Paramount Global disabled mtvnews.com and mtv.com/news — removing a trove of hundreds of thousands of articles ...
Where do music historians go to find the sounds that shape the stories they tell? There are some obvious places, like the Library of Congress, whose National Jukebox offers more than ten thousand ...
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