Playboy Archives Go Digital

Even the WSJ manages to work in a reference to the supremely uninteresting death of Anna Nicole Smith. Yeesh.

Playboy - The Best of Anna Nicole Smith
“Playboy - The Best of Anna Nicole Smith”

Playboy Archives Go Digital; That Means Its Articles, Too - WSJ.com
In 1953, Hugh Hefner bought a nude picture of Marilyn Monroe from a local Chicago calendar company and published the first issue of Playboy. The magazine took erotica out of the back alleys and placed it in a stylized package, helping to usher in the sexual revolution -- which quickly left the publication behind.
Today, Playboy, in an attempt to get back in step with the present, is unveiling plans to make its entire text and photo archive available digitally.

The new venture will allow consumers to peruse Playboy's articles and photos on DVD. All 636 issues of the monthly will be rendered page-by-page on six discs -- one for each decade. The first two discs will hit stores in October. Each disc will retail for $100, is meant to be viewed on a computer screen and will be accompanied by a 200-page book.
...
The magazine has also featured nude pictorials of a number of women who were either famous at the time or went on to become so, including Sharon Stone, Jane Fonda and Anna Nicole Smith, who died yesterday, jamming some of Playboy's email system with requests for reprints of her image.

also utilizing an interesting loophole to avoid having to pay a dime to the writers/photographers/cartoonists who made the magazine worth archiving in the first place:

Converting the magazine requires painstakingly scanning 115,880 pages of Playboy magazines and then doing a “text-conversion process,” which involves manually typing all the text on the page. Bondi is using two typists per page to copy the text into a database to improve accuracy. Then, Bondi will break each page down into its elements: cartoons, editorial content, advertising, photos and captions.

Playboy feels that by duplicating the magazine exactly as it existed, complete with ads and in the same format as they appeared on the pages of the magazine, that they don't need to seek additional rights from writers or artists featured in its pages. It's a loophole the New Yorker exploited as well for its project.

The tactic has drawn scrutiny from some writers' groups. “In this case, I'd have to take a very hard look to see where this goes in the context of commercial advantage,” says Gerard Colby, president of the National Writers Union, the nation's only trade union dedicated to freelance writers. “Even if this does fall within the Supreme Court's parameters of allowed reproduction, we'd still want to take a look at this whole issue of remuneration for writers if the publisher is taking commercial advantage.”


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