bookshare inaccessible?

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Janina,
Thanks for the explanation. I've always wondered how Freedom Scientific
could buy Arkenstone and have it remain a nonprofit. That is what one of
their press releases said. I'm the head of a nonprofit myself, and I was
wondering what legal loophole they wriggled through.
But bookshare.org is certainly behaving like FS. The part of their site
with public domain books should be freely accessible to everyone and
accessible with a text browser.
John
On Sun, 14 Apr 2002, Janina Sajka wrote:

> John:
>
> You're wrong. Benetech is not owned by Freedom Scientific. Where ever did you get such an idea into your head?
>
> Benetech is a 501(c)3 non profit in the U.S. BookShare is one of several Benetech projects.
>
> Perhaps here's what has you confused. Benetech was created when Arkenstone sold OpenBook to Freedom Scientific. Since
> Arkenstone was also a 501(c)3, no money from that sale could go to an inidividual, as indeed it did not. Rather, the
> President of Arkenstone, Jim Fruchterman, used the money to start Benetech, which he is also President of.
>
> But it is certainly not "owned" by anyone.
>
> On Sun, 14 Apr 2002, John J. Boyer wrote:
>
> > Cheryl,
> > Bookshare.org is run by Benetech, which is owned by Freedom Scientific.
> > >From my experience with the  latter company I'm not surprised that
> > bookshare.org is inaccessible. They have no sensitivity to their customers
> > needs. They don't even run their business properly.
> > John
> >
> >
> >
>
>

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