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Mostafa044
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Joined: Tue Oct 21, 2025 11:00 am

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Without a change to its current law, universities and libraries in the UK might not be able to work with universities in other countries on many research projects. While we urge the UK government to retain some form of noncommercial exception for text and data mining (TDM), as we point out in our submission, the current version is burdensome—for example, requiring that any digitized versions of physical materials made for the purpose of one project be scanned again and again for any other projects. Non-commercial actors, many of which are government-funded, should be encouraged to work together and be efficient, not to have to digitize the same materials over and over.

Unfortunately, libraries and other cultural heritage institutions do not control the front pages of newspapers. Nevertheless, we hope the UK government will pay attention to what such noncommercial public interest organizations have to say about the future of our information ecosystem and the development of AI tools that work for everybody.


Rhapsody in Blue stands as an iconic piece of American music with data riveting orchestration, and a cultural footprint that reflects the modernity of the early 20th century. Beyond its artistic merits, the composition has provided numerous cultural touchstones, including its usage as the theme for United Airlines commercials, score backing for films such as “Fantasia 2000,” and countless memorable recorded performances, including a personal favorite by Leonard Bernstein. Among these recordings is a significant one performed by George Gershwin himself at the piano, with accompaniment by the Paul Whiteman Orchestra.

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Recorded on June 10, 1924, and released that October, this version is not just historic for its timing, produced shortly after the piece’s premiere in February of the same year, but also for its details. While today’s audiences might not find it unusual, the phenomenon of a composer or musical artist performing their own work is rare in the history of human experience. Until the late 19th Century, the only way to experience music was in a live setting. By 1924, it had become more and more commonplace to experience music through commercially available recordings. When listening to the 1924 recording by Gershwin, listeners today have a direct auditory link to the piece’s 1924 inception. This is in stark contrast to classical pieces by composers like Mozart, Beethoven, and Bach, who never had the opportunity to record their works. Our understanding of these compositions is shaped by interpretations that are decades or centuries removed from their original creation. Yet, Gershwin’s personal interpretation of his composition offers a unique connection to the moment of its creation, allowing us to hear the piano played with the intensity Gershwin intended. It invokes a feeling of closeness to a time long removed from the current moment.
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