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What is the difference between in-copyright content, out-of-print-works, orphan works and public domain material when it comes to digitisation?

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What is the difference between in-copyright content, out-of-print-works, orphan works and public domain material when it comes to digitisation?

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Copyright protects works from being reproduced without the permission of the person who created them. It gives creators an exclusive right to the copying of their work so that they can be rewarded for their work and encourages future creativity. When you digitise a work you are reproducing it in another format. This means that to digitise work protected by copyright, you need the consent of the rightholder whether the work is still in-print or out-of-print. However, for some works, especially older or out-of-print material, it is impossible to identify or locate the rightholders and ask for the right to digitise these works, also called orphan works. If the work is not or no longer protected by copyright (the term of copyright protection is 70 years after the death of the author), it becomes part of the public domain and can be digitised freely by anyone. What was the “High Level Group on Digital Libraries” and who participated in it? The High Level Group on Digital Libraries is a grou

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Copyright protects works from being reproduced without the permission of the person who created them. It gives creators an exclusive right to the copying of their work so that they can be rewarded for their work and encourages future creativity. When you digitise a work you are reproducing it in another format. This means that to digitise work protected by copyright, you need the consent of the rightholder whether the work is still in-print or out-of-print. However, for some works, especially older or out-of-print material, it is impossible to identify or locate the rightholders and ask for the right to digitise these works, also called orphan works. If the work is not or no longer protected by copyright (the term of copyright protection is 70 years after the death of the author), it becomes part of the public domain and can be digitised freely by anyone. What was the “High Level Group on Digital Libraries” and who participated in it? The High Level Group on Digital Libraries is a grou

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