User:Cneubauer
fnmting
Todo: (If Someone Else Doesn't Get to Them First)
[edit]- cleanup Hellas
- finish adding images to De Occulta Philosophia
add more works by Lord Dunsany- add more works by Algernon Blackwood
- finish Requested texts
- thin out Category:From en:Wikipedia
- proofread everything on H. P. Lovecraft's page
- find some more stuff for Portal:Florida
- write a greasemonkey extension to limit user contributions to just new adds
write a greasemonkey extension to combine lots of sub pages into one pagefix the table of contents on The Devil in Iron- wikify 9/11 Commission Report
finish The Rig Veda- work on Category:Incomplete texts
fix Chapten Ten: In the Storm
Weird Authors
[edit]- The Frost Giant's Daughter (short story)
- The Phoenix on the Sword (short story)
- Supernatural Horror in Literature (essay)
- The Call of Cthulhu (short story)
- The Shadow Over Innsmouth (short story)
- Herbert West: Reanimator (short story)
- Where Once Poe Walked (poem)
- Letter to August Derleth, December 11, 1919 (letter)
- The Master of the Crabs (Short Story)
- The Hashish Eater -or- The Apocalypse of Evil (Poem)
- The City of the Singing Flame (Short Story)
- Nyctalops (Poem)
- The Lotus and the Moon (Prose Poem)
- Recommended by Boyd Pearson on The Eldritch Dark
Non-Weird Authors
[edit]On Copyright
[edit]"Fair use under the U.S. Copyright Act is generally broader and more flexible than the copyright exceptions in other countries, including fair dealing in the U.K. Thus, the scanning of a library of books might not be permitted under the copyright laws of most other countries. However, copyright law is territorial; that is, one infringes the copyright laws of a particular country only with respect to acts of infringement that occurred in that country. Since Google presumably will be scanning the books in the United States, the only relevant law with respect to the scanning is U.S. copyright law. Nonetheless, the search results will be viewable in other countries. This means that Google’s distribution of a few sentences from a book to a user in another country must be analyzed under that country’s copyright laws. (Google arguably is causing a copy of the sentences to be made in the random access memory of the user’s computer.) While the copyright laws of most countries might not be so generous as to allow the reproduction of an entire book, almost all copyright laws do permit short quotations. These exceptions for quotations should be sufficient to protect Google’s transmission of Library Project search results to users."
The Google Print Library Project: A Copyright Analysis
Jonathan Band1
jband@policybandwidth.com