Project Gutenberg: Common Misconceptions The Most Common Misconceptions About Project Gutenberg Last update: February 27, 2007 These are the mistakes most commonly found in the press coverage concerning Project Gutenberg: 1. There are only 20,000 Project Gutenberg eBooks. Actually, as of this end of the week in which I am writing this should be closer to 25,000 than to 20,000, including the subtracting out of 350 duplicate entries via PG of Europe. This is just the number on the original site: http://www.gutenberg.org Don't forget the ~80,000 at http://www.gutenberg.cc Actually there are about 100,000 grand total. Nearly 80,000 are at http://www.gutenberg.cc, not to mention European and Australian sites. 2. There is only one official Project Gutenberg site. Here is a list of the official sites and numbers of books: http://www.gutenberg.org About 22,500 items. http: PG of Australia About 1,500 items. http: PG of Europe About 500 items. http://www.gutenberg.cc About 80,000 items. http://www.readingroo.ms About 400 items, another 400 soon. Keep an eye out for Project Gutenbergs of Canada, Portugal, the Philippines, etc. 3. All Project Gutenberg files are public domain. About 2% of our files are copyrighted, used with permission. 4. You can't choose what fonts, colors, margins, etc., to use with the plain text Project Gutenberg eBooks. Plain text eBooks appear in YOUR choice of default fonts. There are any number of fonts, colors, etc., to read in. However, a great many highly paid pundits seem to know no way to select these and complain about their own defaults. 5. Project Gutenberg is the same as The World eBook Fair The world eBook Fair is a consortium of eBook providers who get together once a year to demonstrate the numbers and power of eBooks, both free and commercial. The First World eBook Fair was in July, 2006 and had an estimated 1/3 million eBooks available, and gave away a million eBooks, or close to it, on most weekdays. There was an attempt at a Second World eBook Fair later in 2006, but various elements kept the project from the same success, so it has been rescheduled for July, 2007 with 2/3 to 3/4 million eBooks. 6. Michael Hart is officially with University of Illinois departments, programs, etc. While he is a highly honored graduate, there has been, and remains, no official connection, though maybe that will change in the near future. 7. Project Gutenberg eBooks are subject to data loss that the media sometimes refers to as "bit rot," in which a medium is used that either degrades over time, or that requires a certain kind of computer to read, and would be totally useless without that kind of computer. This kind of argument has often been used by those who would like to prevent eBooks from becoming "the medium of choice," but the arguments all hinge on a big false assumption, that data must be stored only in one place and trickle down to the world from there. In this case I often like to quote Linus Torvalds, the author of another open source project, Linux, who says "Only wimps use backup; real men just upload important files on FTP and let the rest of the world mirror it." Note, FTP servers were the predecessors of the servers using HTTP that run The World Wide Web. The general idea/ideal was that these "anonymous" file servers allowed anyone to download all the files via a similar method as today, but without "cookies" and the other things that require leaving your name behind. Project Gutenberg eBooks are still available via these anonymous FTP servers [File Transfer Protocol], around the world, and on many other kinds of sites. There are so many sites carrying Gutenberg books, that anything short of a worldwide catastrophic failure for the entire Internet would still leave plenty of copies for free download at any time. Not one single Project Gutenberg eBook has ever been a victim of "bit rot" as perpetrated by various media to convince people that anything stored in a computer has to be considered as temporary because the drives fail, the CDs and DVDs rot over the years, etc., but not one of these take into account the original philosophy for the distribution of Project Gutenberg eBooks: "Unlimited Distribution." Long before the media ever started complaining about a brand new phenomenon of losing millions of dollars, or perhaps even billions, in computers run by governments or academics, the ideal of Unlimited Distribution took all the winds out of such arguments, other, of course, than for those who simply refused to allow copies made in enough places to insure the safety of the data. Yes, some Project Gutenberg eBooks have disappeared on the original servers, I have witnessed it myself: but a simple note I sent out got me copies back because it is a fairly standard worldwide policy that persons are backing up, or mirroring, our books from the moment of their first appearance. Thus, even some eBooks that disappeared from all three servers I put them on between midnight and dawn, still were preserved elsewhere, and were easily replaced.