Recent Books IconRecent E-Books
Lectures On Art (Washington Allston)
Plays of Gods and Men (Lord Dunsany)
Cheerful - By Request (Edna Ferber)
Not Pretty, But Precious (John Hay, et al.)
Fighting in Flanders (E. Alexander Powell)
The Way We Live Now (Anthony Trollope)
The Man Whom the Trees Loved (Algernon Blackwood)
The Moorland Cottage (Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell)
The Nine-Tenths (James Oppenheim)
You can also Browse the library.
Recent Books IconHelp

Make a difference! Visit Distributed Proofreading and help create an eBook. Getting started is easy, there are many topics, languages and formats to choose from, and just a page a day will help!

Reccent Books IconDonate

Project Gutenberg Needs Your Donation

Project Gutenberg is registered as a 501(c)(3) charity under the United States Internal Revenue Code, so your donation is tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. See our Fundraising pages for more information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and other legal issues.

Find out more...

Project Gutenberg is the Internet's oldest producer of free electronic books (eBooks or etexts). Thanks to ibiblio, the Public's Library and Digital Archive, for hosting the main eBook distribution site and these Web pages. Most of the Project Gutenberg eBooks are older literary works that are in the public domain in the United States. All may be freely downloaded and read, and redistributed for non-commercial use. For complete details, see the "small print" in each eBook, or Project Gutenberg's online license page.


Latest News

News IconPlanned Outage

Notice of planned outage: Tuesday, 9 March 2004, 06:30 - 06:50 EST UNC, which hosts all of ibiblio's systems including gutenberg.net, will be performing maintenance on its core Internet uplink router on Tues, March 9. During the period from 6:30 - 6:50 am EST, ibiblio will experience intermittent outages. This affects all ibiblio services and hosted sites including the HTTP and FTP access to the Project Gutenberg collection.

Posted by Administrator (1st March 2004 09:20am)

News IconPG-EU Underway!

PG-EU: Project Gutenberg of the European Union is underway! Visit the under-development proofreading pages for DP-EU (modeled after Distributed Proofreaders) online at dp.rastko.net.

Posted by Administrator (14th February 2004 09:40am)

News IconUPI News Wire story

Gutenberg author Sam Vaknin has written a UPI News Wire Story addressing our 10,000th eBook, DVD and CD giveaways, and more!

Posted by Administrator (2nd January 2004 10:25pm)

News IconNew Web Pages

On November 14 2003, the gutenberg.net domain was moved from promo.net/pg/ to ibiblio.org/gutenberg. This change will allow us to offer new pages and new services. Some of the pages are new, and many are renamed or were not moved. Please use the navigation links on this page, and inform the webmaster if you encounter anomalies or have suggestions.

Posted by Administrator (25th November 2003 11:15am)

News Icon10,000th ebook online

Project Gutenberg's 10,000th ebook is now online: The Magna Carta. Thanks to everyone who has made this milestone possible!

Posted by Administrator (19th October 2003 04:17pm)

News IconTake a survey

Consider completing a survey as part of a graduate thesis at San Jose State University. Provide your input on eBooks at the survey here: http://senna.sjsu.edu/dlsurvey/surveyb.html.

Posted by Administrator (210th October 2003 07:33pm)

For earlier news, visit the archive, or view our newsletters.

The Project Gutenberg License, Header and "Small Print"

Most Project Gutenberg eBooks are confirmed through our copyright research as being in the public domain in the United States. For the rest, Project Gutenberg has received permission to redistribute the eBooks freely, though some non-free uses might have restrictions.

Starting with eBook #10001, a major rewrite of the Project Gutenberg license and "small print" went into use. It is consistent with prior licenses (which have evolved over the years), but easier to read. This new license starts each eBook with this paragraph:

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net.

The main restrictions are for people who choose to modify the eBooks, and for any commercial use of the Project Gutenberg trademark (which is registered in the US and internationally).

It is permissable and encouraged for all Project Gutenberg eBooks to be freely redistributed as-is, on an unlimited basis, by any person and for any purpose. The only limiting factor is national copyright laws. Because Project Gutenberg can only perform copyright research using U.S. laws, it is possible that some eBooks which are public domain in the U.S. are still under copyright protection in other countries. Persons outside of the U.S. should check their laws before redistributing Project Gutenberg eBooks.

Limitations

There are three circumstances which substantially limit what is permitted with Project Gutenberg eBooks:

  1. Commercial use: The "small print" license includes a royalty schedule for commercial use of the Project Gutenberg trademark, including any sort of resale.
  2. Modification: Only unmodified copies of these eBooks may be redistributed without limitation. If you make changes to eBooks (other than alteration for different display devices), you are prohibited from including the header or otherwise associated your derivative work with Project Gutenberg. Note especially that if you choose to make changes then remove the header, you may not use the Project Gutenberg trademark.
  3. Copyrighted eBooks: When Project Gutenberg is given permission to redistribute copyrighted materials, the copyright holder may stipulate additional licenses or restrictions. These must be honored.

For complete details, please see the Header How to, or email the appropriate person via our contacts page. If you intend to do anything other than freely redistribute Project Gutenberg eBooks as-is, it is important that you read and understand the complete header.

Valid CSS Valid XHTML