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Will we ever see newspapers on Trove (other than the Canberra Times) from a later date than this in the foreseeable future? If there are any copyright or law experts on here I'd love you to join the conversation.
Why did Google get access to The Age right up until the end of 1989? And if that's okay, then surely such work can be reproduced on Trove given Google's newspaper archive is essentially broken?
Perhaps the most annoying part is the defunct papers missing such as The Sporting Globe (1955-1996). What barrier is there to removing access to something that no one can no longer buy anyway?
Non-exhaustive list of post-1954 works that can be accessed:
Note, you may need a state library membership to access these. Some can also only be accessed with specific university memberships. But they do exist! I don't have Factiva access just yet so I can't link it (you need an NLA card, which is on its way) but you can be sure that they're available from when I've said.
What this demonstrates is that there is a sizeable "digital black hole" that exists between 1955 and 1995. Only via the unreliable Google News Archives (The Age, SMH) and the Fairfax Archives (headlines only with full articles only via subscription) do we have any sort of continuous link throughout time.
If you have any other sources then please share them in this thread.
Why did Google get access to The Age right up until the end of 1989? And if that's okay, then surely such work can be reproduced on Trove given Google's newspaper archive is essentially broken?
Perhaps the most annoying part is the defunct papers missing such as The Sporting Globe (1955-1996). What barrier is there to removing access to something that no one can no longer buy anyway?
Non-exhaustive list of post-1954 works that can be accessed:
Note, you may need a state library membership to access these. Some can also only be accessed with specific university memberships. But they do exist! I don't have Factiva access just yet so I can't link it (you need an NLA card, which is on its way) but you can be sure that they're available from when I've said.
- AAP General News Wire (2004–2018 via ProQuest)
- AAP Sports News Wire (2004–2018 via ProQuest)
- The [Adelaide] Advertiser (1997–2007 via Media Scan; 1998–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- The Argus (1955–1957 via Trove)
- The Age (1955–1989 via Google News; 1991–2009 via Media Scan; 1991–2018 via Factiva; 1996–2018 via ProQuest; 2006–2018 via The Age Library Edition)
- The Australian (1991–2009 via Media Scan; 1996–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- Canberra Times (1955–1995 via Trove; 1996–2018 via Factiva; 1996–2018 via ProQuest)
- Courier-Mail (1994–2005 via Media Scan; 1998–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- Daily Telegraph (1996–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- Geelong Advertiser (2009–2018 via ProQuest)
- Herald Sun (1991–2009 via Media Scan; 1997–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- The Mercury (1999–2018 via Factiva; 2001–2018 via ProQuest)
- NT News (2010–2018 via ProQuest)
- Ryerson Index (1955–2018 via www.ryersonindex.org)
- Sunday Times (2001–2018 via Factiva; 2004–2015 via ProQuest; 2016–2018 via The West Archive)
- Sydney Morning Herald (1955–1989 via Google News; 1955–1995 via SMH Archive; 1986–2018 via Factiva; 1996–2005 via Media Scan; 1996–2018 via ProQuest; 2006–2018 via SMH Library Edition)
- West Australian (1996–1997 via Media Scan; 1996–2018 via Factiva; 2004–2018 via The West Archive)
What this demonstrates is that there is a sizeable "digital black hole" that exists between 1955 and 1995. Only via the unreliable Google News Archives (The Age, SMH) and the Fairfax Archives (headlines only with full articles only via subscription) do we have any sort of continuous link throughout time.
If you have any other sources then please share them in this thread.