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Posted 1/24/2002 by craig@bookways.com
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Issues in the Digital Age 
A review of Lawrence Lessig's the Future of Ideas, The excess of control by Felix Stalder
In The Future of Ideas Lawrence Lessig, a professor at the Stanford Law School, conveys a bleak message: We are destroying the conditions of freedom and creativity on the Internet. Right at the moment when the Internet has begun to show its full potential for increasing growth and innovation globally, a counterrevolution is threatening, if not already succeeding, to undermine this potential. [read more]
E-Books 
Consortium of 12 Universities Begins Project to Deliver Academic E-Books by Jeffrey R. Young
Academic libraries and university presses at Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago have teamed up in an e-publishing venture that aims to put hundreds of scholarly books in electronic form.

Last month, leaders of the 12 universities committed from $50,000 to $100,000 to develop a prototype for the joint e-publishing venture, says Tom Peters, director of the consortium's center for library initiatives. The institutions have worked together for decades as part of a group called the Committee on Institutional Cooperation. [read more]

A New Museum for Books 
The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art
Where do you buy your books? 
Amazon.com Posts First-Ever Profit by Allison Linn
Amazon.com, the pioneering Internet retailer that has symbolized for many the potential and the pitfalls of dot-com commerce, posted its first net profit ever in the fourth quarter, beating its own forecasts and Wall Street's expectations.

For the quarter ended Dec. 31, the world's largest Internet retailer said it earned $5 million, or 1 cent a share, compared with a net loss of $545 million, or $1.53 per share, in the year-ago period.

The results were helped by lowered prices and companywide penny-pinching. [read more]

In New York, A Bookstore's Last Chapter by Lynne Duke

A "lost our lease" sign screams from the display windows wrapped around the northwest corner of busy West 57th Street and Broadway, anchored for nearly three decades by Coliseum Books. It was a special place, a New York niche, all about the mind and its passions, not just the mass-market book boom of the moment. You'd find no cappuccino machines inside Coliseum, no comfy couches. It was a bookstore both populist and purist. If it was in print, no matter how obscure or rarefied, you could find it on these shelves. Now, that's all over.

Next week the doors will close for good. George Leibson, 57, the owner, and the man who feels this is partly his fault, might try to go beyond Sunday, a couple more days of his book-selling life. In lieu of wife and children, Coliseum was his family. He is sad -- and embarrassed -- that it has come to this. [read more]

Suggestion: If you need or want to purchase a book, try a locally owned, independent bookstore in your town or neighborhood first.

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