Digital Public Library of America Goes Live

By By cat Johnson
Published on May 8, 2013
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The April launch of the Digital Public Library of America brings the knowledge-sharing we love about local libraries to the internet.

This article originally appeared at Shareable.

Public libraries exist to ensure that people have free and open access to information. The Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), which launched in April, aims to provide that same access to information and materials, in the digital realm.

A project several years in the making, there are three facets to the DPLA: it’s an open portal that provides access to a variety of resources including documents, photographs, historic artifacts, film footage, art and other culturally significant materials; it’s a tech platform for people to build upon (think apps that reveal geotagged materials); and it’s an innovation and advocacy organization that works to make, and keep, content openly available to the public.

Launching with over two million materials from museums, libraries, schools, cultural centers and more, the DPLA is just getting started. The grand vision is to have the library be an ever-growing hub for librarians, students, teachers, artists, developers, historians and anyone else who is interested in seeing, learning about, using, repurposing, expanding and sharing materials.

John Palfrey, president of the Board of Directors of the DPLA sees the library as a symbol of the networked age. As he put it, “The most exciting idea is that we cannot begin to imagine the extraordinary things that librarians and their many partners can accomplish with this open platform and such extraordinarily rich materials…We will create new knowledge together and make accessible, free to all, information that people need in order to thrive in a democracy.”

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