Tag: libraries (page 2 of 3)

Copyright in the Libraries: Special Collections

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all posts in the series here.

photo of Nena Couch

Nena Couch, Head of Special Collections

The Ohio State University Libraries are home to several special collections spanning a variety of subject areas. These collections contain many rare, primary source, and unique materials around a particular topic or area of study, and serve as a rich resource for education, research, and other projects. Special collections often contain objects beyond traditional publications, lending additional complexity to copyright questions regarding these materials. I met with Nena Couch, Head of Thompson Library Special Collections, and Beth Kattelman, Associate Professor and Curator of Theatre, to discuss the ways that copyright influences the Libraries’ special collections such as the Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute (TRI).

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Copyright in the Libraries: Music and Dance Library

Photo of Alan Green

Alan Green,
Head Librarian for Music and Dance and
Adjunct Professor at the School of Music

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

The Music and Dance Library at The Ohio State University houses a diverse collection of materials in a wide variety of media: compact disc and tape recordings, books, sheet music, DVDs, VHS, serials, vinyl records, and more. I met with Alan Green, Head Librarian for Music and Dance and Adjunct Professor at the School of Music, and Sean Ferguson, an Assistant Librarian at the Music and Dance Library, to discuss the ways that copyright affects their services, collections, and patrons.

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Copyright in the Libraries: Fine Arts Library

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The OSU Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

Profile photo of Sarah Falls

Sarah Falls, Fine Arts Librarian

Sarah Falls, Assistant Professor, is the Head of the Fine Arts Library at OSU, and as Fine Arts Librarian, Sarah supports the Departments of DesignArt, History of Art, Arts Administration, Education and Policy, and the Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design. I met with Sarah to discuss copyright and the arts, and the unique influence copyright exerts on these particular disciplines.

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Copyright in the Libraries: eReserves

Note: This blog has been updated to reflect the fact that the eReserves service within the University Libraries has been discontinued.

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

The Ohio State University Libraries previously provided an eReserves service to assist instructors with uploading supplementary course readings to Carmen (the learning management system used at OSU). Terry Camelford, the Program Coordinator for eReserves, met with me to discuss her team’s work and how they navigated the copyright issues related to eReserves.

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Copyright in the Libraries: Digital Content Services (Part 2)

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all posts in the series here.

Photo of Maureen Walsh

Maureen Walsh,
Institutional Repository Services Librarian

Digital Content Services at The OSU Libraries includes the Libraries’ Publishing Program and the Knowledge Bank, OSU’s institutional repository (this post focuses on the Knowledge Bank, while Digital Content Services: Part 1 discussed the Libraries’ Publishing Program). Melanie Schlosser (Digital Publishing Librarian) and Maureen Walsh (Institutional Repository Services Librarian) are interim co-heads of Digital Content Services; Melanie and Maureen met with me to discuss the ways that copyright affects their work in the publishing program and the institutional repository. In fact, they observed that not a day goes by when they aren’t thinking about copyright, as they are constantly working with copyrighted materials and “someone else’s content.”

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Copyright in the Libraries: Digital Content Services (Part 1)

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

Photo of Melanie Schlosser

Melanie Schlosser, Digital Publishing Librarian

Digital Content Services at The OSU Libraries include the Libraries’ Publishing Program and the Knowledge Bank, OSU’s institutional repository (this post focuses on the Libraries’ Publishing Program, while Digital Content Services: Part 2 will discuss the Knowledge Bank). Melanie Schlosser (Digital Publishing Librarian) and Maureen Walsh (Institutional Repository Services Librarian) are interim co-heads of Digital Content Services; Melanie and Maureen met with me to discuss how copyright affects their work in the publishing program and the institutional repository. In fact, they observed that not a day goes by when they aren’t thinking about copyright, as they are constantly working with copyrighted materials and “someone else’s content.”

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Copyright in the Libraries: Government Publications

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

Photo of Mary Ann Ries

Mary Ann Ries, Library Associate

The OSU Libraries have been collecting government publications for over a century: since it became a Federal Depository Library in 1902. Government publications may be generally defined as any material (print or digital) published by any government agency, including federal, state, county, and city. The collection at OSUL includes U.S. government materials from all of the above categories, and also includes international materials. I met with Mary Ann Ries, Library Associate for Research and Education, to discuss our government publications collection and how copyright affects this particular collection.

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Copyright in the Libraries: Preservation and Reformatting

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

Photo of Emily Shaw

Emily Shaw,
Head of Preservation & Reformatting

Preservation and reformatting at The OSU Libraries encompass a wide variety of activities, some of which are not as affected by copyright while others engage with copyright issues on a regular basis. Reformatting primarily means digitization, and preservation efforts include systematically preserving print collections by repairing damaged collections, binding journals and paperbacks, monitoring collection environments, and more. Emily Shaw is Head of the Preservation and Reformatting Department at The OSU Libraries, and she met with me to discuss the ways in which copyright affects her department.

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Articles of Interest: January-June 2015

This post highlights articles published in the first half of 2015 with a focus on copyright, especially as it pertains to libraries, higher education, and scholarly communication. Links to the full-text articles are provided when available; [OSU full-text] links will connect authenticated users through The Ohio State University Libraries, while [OA full-text] links point to an open access version of the article that should be available to all users.

Did we miss an interesting article? Please share the citation in the comments!

 

Copyright

Gordon-Murnane, L. l. (2015). The digital public domain. Online Searcher39(2), 10-15. [OSU full-text]

Saw, C. L., & Chik, W. B. (2015). Whither the future of internet streaming and time-shifting? Revisiting the rights of reproduction and communication to the public in copyright law after Aereo. International Journal of Law & Information Technology23(1), 53-88. [OA full-text]

 

Copyright Education

Dow, M. J., Boettcher, C. A., Diego, J. F., Karch, M. E., Todd-Diaz, A., & Woods, K. M. (2015). Case-based learning as pedagogy for teaching information ethics based on the Dervin sense-making methodology. Journal of Education for Library & Information Science56(2), 141-157. [OSU full-text]

Keener, M. (2015). Contextualizing copyright: Fostering students’ understanding of their rights and responsibilities as content creators. Virginia Libraries61(1), 37-42. [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

Lofton, J. (2015). Blogging with students: A vehicle for writing, digital citizenship, and more. School Librarian’s Workshop35(5), 13-15. [OSU full-text]

Schoen, M. J. (2015). Teaching visual literacy skills in a one-shot session. Visual Resources Association Bulletin41(1), 1-12. [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

 

Libraries

Arendt, A., & Fife, D. (2015). Impact of public domain resources on public libraries in the United States. Journal of Librarianship & Information Science47(2), 91-103. [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

Band, J. (2015). What does the HathiTrust decision mean for libraries?. Research Library Issues, (285), 7-13. [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

Butler, B. (2015). Fair use rising: Full-text access and repurposing in recent case law. Research Library Issues, (285), 3-6.  [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

Cox, K. (2015). International copyright developments: From the Marrakesh treaty to trade agreements. Research Library Issues, (285), 14-22. [OSU full-text] / [OA full-text]

Dygert, C., & Van Rennes, R. (2015). Building your licensing and negotiation skills toolkit. Serials Librarian68(1-4), 17-25. [OSU full-text]

Kawooya, D., Veverka, A., & Lipinski, T. (2015). The copyright librarian: A study of advertising trends for the period 2006–2013. Journal of Academic Librarianship41(3), 341-349. [OSU full-text]

Light, M. (2015). Controlling goods or promoting the public good: Choices for special collections in the marketplace. RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, & Cultural Heritage16(1), 48-63. [OSU full-text]

Smith, D. (2015). Finding parents for orphan works: Using genealogical methods to locate heirs for obtaining copyright permissions. Journal of Academic Librarianship41(3), 280-284. [OSU full-text]

Walz, A. R. (2015). Open and editable: Exploring library engagement in open educational resource adoption, adaptation and authoring. Virginia Libraries61(1), 23-31. [OSU full text] / [OA full-text]

 

 

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By Jessica Chan, Rights Management Specialist at the Copyright Resources Center, The Ohio State University Libraries

Copyright in the Libraries: Interlibrary Services

Copyright touches many library services because we collect, share and loan original works fixed in a wide variety of tangible media. The Copyright Resources Center conducted a series of informational interviews with faculty and staff from various areas of The Ohio State University Libraries to discuss the ways in which they engage with copyright issues. This blog series documents those conversations, and highlights how copyright law helps to shape services provided by the Libraries. See all available posts in the series here.

Photo of Brian Miller

Brian Miller, Head of Interlibrary Services

Interlibrary services at The OSU Libraries comprise three categories: lending, borrowing, and document delivery. Lending services consist of loaning physical copies and scans of shorter materials to other institutions, while borrowing activities involve obtaining copies from other institutions to fulfill requests from OSU-affiliated patrons.  Document delivery is a service where we provide scans from our own locally held print collections to members of the OSU community. Brian Miller, Head of Interlibrary Services, met with me to discuss how copyright weaves through all three services. Interlibrary services are influenced by community practices established in the National Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyright Works (CONTU) final report from 1978, known as the CONTU guidelines, and the statutory provisions of U.S. Copyright Law.

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