Interested in free audio books? If you are, then you should check out yet another source of people investing their time, energy and effort giving and placing value in to the world.
The LibriVox project provides totally free audiobooks from the public domain. There is a catalog of works completed which include wonderful works such as Treasure Island, A Christmas Carol, The Raven, Moby Dick and many more.
“LibriVox is a place where volunteers record chapters of books in the public domain, and then we release the audio files back onto the net (via podcast and catalog). Right now all our books are in English, but we welcome all languages – we just need volunteers willing to read in other languages.
Also note: LibriVox is an entirely VOLUNTEER effort. We have no budget, no staff, everything is done by volunteers. Keep that in mind if you see some errors, mistakes, or problems with how we do things.”
My intention is to participate in this effort. What saddens me is that most works in the public domain are pre-1923 due to the changes in copyright law (more about the public domain here). There are literally dozens of books I’d like to read — that are currently out of print — but trying to figure out who to go to, how much it would cost to obtain the rights to release an audio version in to the public domain, and then pay them is too hard.
With Google arm-wrestling publishers about Google Print (to scan and make works searchable), the Creative Commons striving to be an alternative to ‘traditional’ content providers, and podcasters pushing hard on the record industry to open up catalogs for mash-ups and use, perhaps win-win scenarios will come to the fore and make intellectual property more open and free.

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