Monthly Archives: April 2009

SPARC-Oberlin Group Webcast on Open Access Policies

Ray English, Director of Libraries at Oberlin College has posted a webcast about Harvard’s Open Access policy. Participants included librarians and staff from twenty-six liberal-arts colleges. From the article:

The webcast featured Stuart Shieber, Professor of Computer Science at Harvard and director of the university’s new office of scholarly communication. Shieber was the chief architect of the open access policy passed by the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences in February 2008, and has been instrumental the passage of similar policies by the Harvard Law School and the Kennedy School of Government…

In his webcast presentation Shieber outlined the reasons for Harvard’s adoption of its open access policy, including in particular the history of scholarly journal price increases and resulting problems in access to research literature.

Thanks to Gavin Baker at Open Access News for the link.

‘Digital Open’ for Youth

Heather Ford is announcing a new community competition called Digital Open. The purpose of the competition is to recognize online achievements of youth ages 17 and younger in areas such art, music and open source development. From the blog post:

I really love the details of this competition – great social networking features and badges that will be unlocked when users achieve things like writing 10 comments etc. Best among the prizes (gear, tech, bags etc) is that winners in each category will be featured on BoingBoing Video.

Australian IP Conference

Gavin Baker at Open Access News has posted links to notes on the recent Unlocking IP 2009 Conference in Australia. From the blog All Modern Things (one of the conference attendees):

…I responded that since our (FLOSS) legal foundation is valid, all we can be attacked with is FUD (negative marketing), and even that doesn’t work forever. And calling it “war” is a strange thing, since it is a one-sided war, as we aren’t aiming to topple traditional IP companies — that will just be a completely unintentional side-effect.

OER Remix Game Now Online

David Wiley is announcing a new version of his OER Remix game, which is now playable online. The purpose of the game is to mix and match cards with different open licenses to create a remix and in doing so demonstrating the difficulties of license incompatibility. The previous version was paper-based only. From the article:

Your thoughts and feedback would be appreciated. Critical and corrective feedback is, of course, the most useful kind.

Starving for Textbooks in Iraq

Corinne Reilly at the Philadelphia Inquirer is reporting on the current state of textbooks in Iraq. Students who are in the K-12 system use textbooks published decades ago. Graduate students have to purchase their books through friends in other countries. The textbook problem stems from a number of causes. Bookstore owners, frightened by the violence, are opening slowly. Delivery of books purchased online is unreliable, if not impossible. From the article:

Like so much else here, access to textbooks is improving. But progress is slow in a country with almost daily bombings, rampant government corruption and scarce electricity and clean water. “Some say books are a small matter compared to many of Iraq’s issues, but I say this is not true,” said Alaa Makki, a Sunni Muslim lawmaker who heads the Iraqi parliament’s education committee. “Without knowledge and educated people, who will solve these things?”

Internet Archive Requests Copyright Indemnity

Continuing OEN’s coverage of Google’s orphan works settlement, Eric Bangeman at Arstechnica is reporting that the Internet Archive has submitted a letter to the judge in The Authors Guild v. Google. The letter asks for the same copyright indemnity for its Wayback Machine that is being offered to Google. Both Google and The Authors Guild oppose the move. From the article:

“The Archive’s text archive would greatly benefit from the same limitation of potential copyright liability that the proposed settlement provides Google,” argues the Internet Alliance in a letter to Judge Chin. “Without such a limitation, the Archive would be unable to provide some of these same services due to the uncertain legal issues surrounding orphan books.”

Wiley Presents “The Trucker Tale”

David Wiley has posted a parable of sorts regarding the current state of academic publishing. He compares it to someone who has created a brillant product, but is forced to distribute it under a draconian agreement with truckers. From the blog post:

Why do more faculty not see that, as researchers, we come up with ideas for research, find grant funding for the research, identify and hire graduate students and other professionals to perform the research with us, carry out the research, write up the results of the research in a clear and concise manner, and then are forced to surrender all our rights in the written results of our research to a publisher who sells them for his own profit?

Freedom of Information Act and Course Materials

Daithí Mac Síthigh has a blog post on a recent decision by the UK Information Commissioner that the Freedom of Information Act can apply to course materials. The decision stems from Ben Goldacre at badscience.net requesting information about homeopathy courses taught at the University of Central Lancashire. The decision was not absolute, excluding case studies resulting from the lecturer’s research. From the blog post:

his decision may have an impact on universities (as well as those who criticise them) far beyond the question of homeopathy. Indeed, given the well-known exemption from both FOI and data protection of certain materials (such as exam scripts), will universities seek a specific exclusion here, encourage UCLAN [University of Central Lancashire] to appeal the Information Commissioner’s decision, come up with better arguments against future requests, set fire to course materials – or all four?

Pam Samuelson on the Book Search Settlement Agreement: restructuring the publishing industry

Pam Samuelson starts her column “Legally Speaking: The Dead Souls of the Google Booksearch Settlement” at the O’Reilly Radar by saying that:

Google has scanned the texts of more than seven million books from major university research libraries for its Book Search initiative and processed the digitized copies to index their contents. Google allows users to download the entirety of these books if they are in the public domain (about 1 million of them are), but at this point makes available only “snippets” of relevant texts when the books are still in copyright unless the copyright owner has agreed to allow more to be displayed.

In the fall of 2005, the Authors Guild, which then had about 8000 members, and five publishers sued Google for copyright infringement. Google argued that its scanning, indexing, and snippet-providing was a fair and non-infringing use because it promoted wider public access to books and because Google would take out of the Book Search corpus any digitized books whose rights holders objected to their inclusion. Many copyright professionals expected the Authors Guild v. Google case to be the most important fair use case of the 21st century.

This column argues that the proposed settlement of this lawsuit is a privately negotiated compulsory license primarily designed to monetize millions of orphan works. It will benefit Google and certain authors and publishers, but it is questionable whether the authors of most books in the corpus (the “dead souls” to which the title refers) would agree that the settling authors and publishers will truly represent their interests when setting terms for access to the Book Search corpus.

After discussing most important issues, such as the Orphan Works problem and the possible “de facto” Google monopoly, Professor Samuelson concludes brilliantly:

The Book Search agreement is not really a settlement of a dispute over whether scanning books to index them is fair use. It is a major restructuring of the book industry’s future without meaningful government oversight. The market for digitized orphan books could be competitive, but will not be if this settlement is approved as is.

In a time when major discussions are taking place in relation to afordable access to textbooks and books needed for higher education, this action of Google raises many questions related to whom else should be represented in this dispute. The question remains: Does this agreement do enough, or is clear enough, to guarantee student access to essential educational materials?

Crossing the Chasm

Brian Lamb has posted the theme for the Open Education Conference 2009 – “Crossing the Chasm.” Lamb also discusses the keynote speakers, which include Fred Mulder (Open Universiteit Nederland) and Catherine Ngugi (OER Africa). From the blog post:

The call for proposals has been posted with a May 1 deadline, and I fervently hope we will have some very tough decisions to make for the program. Obviously, a gathering is as only as strong as its participants. And speaking for myself, I’m hopeful this event will build on the identity of previous OpenEd conferences to push the notion of how we think about open education. I’m hoping to see a strong presence from the worlds of social media and the open web, not to mention the participation of community educators and activists.