Brewster Kahle: A digital library, free to the world

47,269 views ・ 2008-09-11

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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We really need to put the best we have to offer within reach of our children.
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If we don't do that, we're going to get the generation we deserve.
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They're going to learn from whatever it is they have around them.
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And we, as now the elite, parents, librarians, professionals, whatever it is,
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a bunch of our activities are, in fact, in trying to get the best we have to offer
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within reach of those around us, or as broadly as we can.
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I'm going to start and end this talk with a couple things that are carved in stone.
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One is what's on the Boston Public Library.
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Carved above their door is, "Free to All."
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It's kind of an inspiring statement,
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and I'll go back at the end of this.
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I'm a librarian, and what I'm trying to do is bring all of the works of knowledge
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to as many people as want to read it.
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And the idea of using technology is perfect for us.
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I think we have the opportunity to one-up the Greeks.
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It's not easy to one-up the Greeks. But with the industriousness of the Egyptians,
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they were able to build the Library of Alexandria --
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the idea of a copy of every book of all the peoples of the world.
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The problem was you actually had to go to Alexandria to go to it.
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On the other hand, if you did, then great things happened.
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I think we can one-up the Greeks and achieve something.
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And I'm going to try to argue only one point today:
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that universal access to all knowledge is within our grasp.
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So if I'm successful, then you'll actually come away thinking,
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yeah, we could actually achieve the great vision of everything ever published,
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everything that was ever meant for distribution,
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available to anybody in the world that's ever wanted to have access to it.
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Yes, there's issues about how money should be distributed,
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and that's still being refigured out.
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But I'd say there's plenty of money, and there's plenty of demand,
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so we can actually achieve that.
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But I'm going to go over the technological, social
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and sort of where are we as a whole, trying to get to that particular vision.
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And the way I'm going to try to do this is do it like the Amazon.com website,
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the books, music, video and just go step -- media type by media type,
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just go and say, all right, how're we doing on this?
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So if we start with books, you know, sort of where are we?
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Well, first you have to, as an engineer, scope the problem. How big is it?
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If you wanted to put all of the published works online
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so that anybody could have it available, well, how big a problem is it?
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Well, we don't really know, but the largest print library in the world
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is the Library of Congress. It's 26 million volumes, 26 million volumes.
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It is, by far and away, the largest print library in the world.
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And a book, if you had a book, is about a megabyte,
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so -- you know, if you had it in Microsoft Word.
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So a megabyte, 26 million megabytes is 26 terabytes --
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it goes mega-, giga-, tera-. 26 terabytes.
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26 terabytes fits in a computer system that's about this big,
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on spinning Linux drives, and it costs about 60,000 dollars.
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So for the cost of a house -- or around here, a garage --
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you can put, you can have spinning all of the words in the Library of Congress.
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That's pretty neat.
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Then the question is, what do you get?
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You know, is it worth trying to get there?
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Do you actually want it online?
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Some of the first things that people do is they make book readers
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that allow you to search inside the books, and that's kind of fun.
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And you can download these things, and look around them in new and different ways.
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And you can get at them remotely, if you happen to have a laptop.
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There's starting to be some of these sort of page turn-y interfaces
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that look a whole lot like books in certain ways,
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and you can search them, make little tabs, and it's kind of cute --
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still very book-like -- on your laptop.
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But I don't know, reading things on a laptop --
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whenever I pull up my laptop, it always feels like work.
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I think that's one of the reasons why the Kindle is so great.
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I don't have to feel like I'm at work to read a Kindle.
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It's starting to be a little bit more specified.
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But I have to say that there's older technologies that I tend to like.
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I like the physical book.
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And I think we can go and use our technology to go and digitize things,
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put them on the Net, and then download,
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print them and bind them, and end up with books again.
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And we sort of said, well, how hard is this?
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And it turns out to not be very hard.
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We actually went off to make a bookmobile.
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And a bookmobile -- the size of a van with a satellite dish,
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a printer, binder and cutter, and kids make their own books.
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It costs about three dollars to download, print and bind a normal, old book.
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And they actually come out kind of nice looking.
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You can actually get really good-looking books
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for on the order of one penny per page, sort of the parts cost for doing this.
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So the idea of -- this technology actually may end up
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putting books back in people's hands again.
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There are some other bookmobiles running around.
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This is Eric Eldred making books at Walden Pond -- Thoreau's works.
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This is just before he got kicked out by the Parks Services,
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for competing with the bookstore there.
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In India, they've got another couple bookmobiles running around.
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And this is the opening day at the Library of Alexandria,
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the new Library of Alexandria, in Egypt.
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It was quite popularly attended.
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And kids starting to make their own books,
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and a happy kid with the first book that he's ever owned.
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So the idea of being able to use this technology
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to end up with paper where I can handle sort of sounds a little retro,
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but I think it still has its place.
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And being from the Silicon Valley, sort of utopian
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sort of world,
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we thought, if we can make this technology work in rural Uganda,
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we might have something.
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So we actually got some funding from the World Bank to try it out.
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And we found in about 30 days we could go and take a couple folks from Silicon Valley,
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fly them to Uganda, buy a car, set up the first Internet connection
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at the National Library of Uganda, figure out what they wanted,
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and get a program going making books in rural Uganda.
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And it actually -- so technologically, it works.
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What we found out of this is we didn't have the right books.
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So the books were in the library. We could get it to people, if they're digitized,
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but we didn't know how to quite get them digitized.
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Everybody thought the answer is, send things to India and China.
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And so we've tried that, and I'll go over that in a moment.
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There are some newer technologies for delivering
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that have happened that are actually quite exciting as well.
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One is a print-on-demand machine that looks like a Rube Goldberg machine.
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We have one of these things now. It's completely cool.
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It's all conveyor belt, and it makes a book.
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And it's called the "Espresso Book Machine,"
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and in about 10 minutes, you can press a button and make a book.
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Something else I'm quite excited about in this particular domain,
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beyond these sort of kiosk-y things where you can get books on demand,
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is some of these new little screens that are coming out.
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And one of my favorites in this is the $100 laptop.
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And I don't mean to steal any thunder here,
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but we've gone and used one of these things to be an e-book reader.
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So here's one of the beta units and you can --
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it actually turns out to be a really good-looking e-book reader.
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And we have a quick hack that we did to try to put one of our books on it,
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and it turns out that 200 dots per inch
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means that you can put scanned books on them that look really good.
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At 200 dots per inch, it's kind of the equivalent of a 300 dot print laser printer.
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We're in good enough shape.
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You actually can go and read scanned books quite easily.
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So the idea of electronic books is starting to come about.
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But how do you go about doing all this scanning?
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So we thought, okay, well, let's try out this send books to India thing.
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And there was a project with, funded by the National Science Foundation --
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sent a bunch of scanners, and the American libraries were supposed to send books.
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Well, they didn't. They didn't want to send their books.
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So we bought 100,000 books and sent them to India.
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And then we learned why you don't want to send books to India.
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The lesson we learned out of this is, scan your own books.
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If you really care about books, you're going to scan them better,
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especially if they're valuable books.
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If they're new books and you can just, you know, butcher them,
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because you could just buy another one,
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that's not such a big deal in terms of doing high-quality scanning.
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But do things that you love.
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But the Indians have been scanning a lot of their own books --
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about 300,000 now -- doing very well.
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The Chinese did over a million, and the Egyptians are about 30,000.
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But we sent -- thought, OK, if we're going to need to do this, let's do it in-library.
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How do we go and do this, and how do we get it down
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so that it's a cost point that we could afford?
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And we sort of picked the price point of 10 cents a page.
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If it's basically the cost of xeroxing to basically digitize, OCR, package it up,
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make it so that you could download, print and bind it -- the whole shebang --
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we would have achieved something.
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So we started out trying to figure out. How do we get to 10 cents?
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And we tried these robot things, and they worked pretty well --
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sort of these auto-page-turning things.
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If we can have Mars Rovers, you'd think you could turn pages.
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But it actually turns out to be pretty hard to turn pages, and the volume isn't there.
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So anyway -- so we ended up making our own book scanner,
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and with two digital, high-grade, professional digital cameras,
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controlled museum lighting, so even if it's a black and white book,
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you can go and get the proper intonation.
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So you basically do a beautiful, respectful job.
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This is not a fax, this is -- the idea is to do a beautiful job
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as you're going through these libraries.
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And we've been able to achieve 10 cents a page if we run things in volume.
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This is what it looks like at the University of Toronto.
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And actually, it turns out to, you know, pay a living wage.
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People seem to love it.
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Yes, it's a little boring, but some people kind of get into the Zen of it.
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(Laughter)
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And especially if it's kind of interesting books that you care about,
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in languages that you can read.
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We actually have been able to do a pretty good job of this, at getting 10 cents a page.
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So 10 cents a page, 300 pages in your average book, 30 dollars a book.
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The Library of Congress, if you did the whole darn thing --
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26 million books -- is about 750 million dollars, right?
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But a million books, I think, actually would be a pretty good start,
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and that would cost 30 million dollars. That's not that big a bill.
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And what we've been able to do is get into libraries.
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We've now got eight of these scanning centers in three countries,
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and libraries are up for having their books scanned.
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The Getty here is moving their books to the UCLA,
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which is where we have one these scanning centers,
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and scanning their out-of-copyright books, which is fabulous.
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So we're starting to get the institutional responsibility.
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The thing we're missing is the 10 cents.
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If we can get the 10 cents, all the rest of it flows.
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We've scanned about 200,000 books.
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Now we're scanning about 15,000 books a month,
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and it's starting to gear up another factor of two from there.
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So all in all, that's going very well.
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And we're starting to move out of the just out-of-copyright
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into the out-of-print world.
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So I think of -- we're kind of going from the out-of-copyright, library stuff,
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and Amazon.com is coming from the in-print world.
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And I think we'll meet in the middle some place,
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and have the classic thing that you have,
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which is a publishing system and a library system working in parallel.
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And so we're starting up a program to do out-of-print works, but loaning them.
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Exactly what loaning means, I'm not quite sure.
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But anyway, loaning out-of-print works from the Boston Public Library,
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the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and a few other libraries
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that are starting to participate in this program,
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to try out this model of where does a library stop
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and where does the bookstore take over.
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So all in all, it's possible to do this in large scale.
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We're also going back over microfilm and getting that online.
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So, we can do 10 cents a page, we're going 15,000 books a month
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and we've got about 250,000 books online,
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counting all the other projects that are starting to add in.
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So what I wanted to argue is, books are within our grasp.
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The idea of taking on the whole ball of wax is not that big a deal.
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Yes, it costs tens of millions, low hundreds of millions,
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but one time shot and we've got basically the history of printed literature online.
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And then, there's business model issues
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about how to try to effectively market it and get it to people.
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But it is within our grasp, technologically and law-wise,
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at least for the out of print and out of copyright,
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we suggest, to be able to get the whole darn thing online.
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Now let's go for audio, and I'm going to go through these.
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So how much is there?
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Well, as best we can tell, there are about two to three million disks
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having been published -- so 78s, long-playing records and CDs --
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or at least that's the largest archives of published materials
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we've been able to sort of point at.
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It costs about 10 dollars a piece to go and take a disk
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and put it online, if you're doing things in volume.
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But we've found that the rights issues are really quite thorny.
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This is a fairly heavily litigated area,
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so we've found that there are niches in the music world
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that aren't served terribly well by the classic commercial publishing system.
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And we've been starting to make these available by going
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and offering shelf space on the Net.
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In the United States, it doesn't cost you to give something away. Right?
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If you give something to a charity or to the public,
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you get a pat on the back and a tax donation --
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except on the Net, where you can go broke.
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If you put up a video of your garage band, and it starts getting heavily accessed,
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you can lose your guitars or your house.
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This doesn't make any sense.
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So we've offered unlimited storage, unlimited bandwidth, forever, for free,
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to anybody that has something to share that belongs in a library.
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And we've been getting a lot of takers. One is the rock 'n' rollers.
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The rock 'n' rollers had a tradition of sharing,
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as long as nobody made any money. You could --
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concert recordings, it's not the commercial recordings,
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but concert recordings, started by the Grateful Dead.
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And we get about two or three bands a day signing up.
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They give permission, and we get about 40 or 50 concerts a day.
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We have about 40,000 concerts, everything the Grateful Dead ever did,
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up on the Net, so that people can see it and listen to this material.
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So audio is possible to put up, but the rights issues are really pretty thorny.
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We've got a lot of collections now --
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a couple hundred thousand items -- and it's growing over time.
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Moving images: if you think of theatrical releases,
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there are not that many of them.
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As best we can tell, there are about 150,000 to 200,000 movies ever
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that are really meant for a large-scale theatrical distribution. It's just not that many.
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But half of those were Indian.
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But anyway, it's doable,
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but we've only found about a thousand of these things that --
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to be out of copyright.
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So we've digitized those and made those available.
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But we've found that there's lots of other types of movies
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that haven't really seen the light of day -- archival films.
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We've found, also, a lot of political films, a lot of amateur films,
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all sorts of things that are basically needing a home, a permanent home.
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So we've been starting to make these available and it's grown to be very popular.
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We're not quite a YouTube.
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We tended towards longer-term things
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and also things that people can reuse and make into new movies,
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which has just been great fun.
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Television comes quite a bit larger.
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We started recording 20 channels of television 24 hours a day.
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It's sort of the biggest TiVo box you've ever seen.
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It's about a petabyte, so far, of worldwide television --
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Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Iraqi, Al Jazeera, BBC, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC --
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24 hours a day.
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We only put one week up,
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which is mostly for cost reasons, which is the 9/11,
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sort of from 9/11/2001. For one week, what did the world see?
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CNN was saying that Palestinians were dancing in the streets.
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Were they? Let's look at the Palestinian television and find out.
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How can we have critical thinking without being able to quote
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and being able to compare what happened in the past?
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And television is dreadfully unrecorded and unquotable,
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except by Jon Stewart, who does a fabulous job.
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So anyway, television is, I would suggest, within our grasp.
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So 15 dollars per video hour, and also about 100 dollars to 150 dollars per celluloid hour,
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we're able to go and get materials online very inexpensively
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and have them up on the Net.
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And we've got, now, a lot of these materials.
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So we've got about 100,000 pieces up there.
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So books, music, video, software. There's only 50,000 titles of it.
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Mostly the issues there are legal issues and breaking copy protections.
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But we've worked through some of those,
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but we've still got real problems in Washington.
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Well, we're best known as the World Wide Web.
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We've been archiving the World Wide Web since 1996.
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We take a snapshot of every website and all of the pages on it, every two months.
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And actually, it's really been pioneered by Alexa Internet,
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which donates this collection to the Internet Archive.
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And it's been growing along for the last 11 years, and it's a fantastic resource.
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And we've made a Wayback Machine
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that you can then go and see old websites kind of the way they were.
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If you go and search on something -- this is Google.com,
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the different versions of it that we have,
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this is what it looks like when it was an alpha release,
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and this is what it looked like at Stanford.
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So anyway, you've got basically an idea of where things came from.
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Mostly, people want to see their old stuff out of this.
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If there's one thing that we want to learn from the Library of Alexandria version one,
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which is probably best known for burning,
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is, don't just have one copy.
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So we've started to -- we've made another copy of all of this
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and we actually put it back in the Library of Alexandria.
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So this is a picture of the Internet Archive at the Library of Alexandria.
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And we now have also another copy building up in Amsterdam.
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So, we should put it in the San Andreas Fault Line in San Francisco,
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flood zone in Amsterdam and in the Middle East. Right, so anyway ...
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so we're hedging our bets here.
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If we go and put it in a couple more places, I think we'll be in good shape.
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There's a political and social question out of this.
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Is all of this, as we go digital, is it going to be public or private?
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There's some large companies that have seen this vision,
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that are doing large-scale digitization,
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but they're locking up the public domain.
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The question is, is that the world that we really want to live in?
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What's the role of the public versus the private as things go forward?
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How do we go and have a world where we both have libraries
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and publishing in the future, just as we basically benefited as we were growing up?
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So universal access to all knowledge --
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I think it can be one of the greatest achievements of humankind,
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like the man on the moon, or the Gutenberg Bible, or the Library of Alexandria.
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It could be something that we're remembered for,
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for millennia, for having achieved.
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And as I said before, I'll end with something
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that's carved above the door of the Carnegie Library.
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Carnegie -- one of the great capitalists of this country --
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carved above his legacy, "Free to the People."
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Thank you very much.
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About this website

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