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Open Access Week 2010 Activities Start on October 18

Open access publishing is a movement that encourages making scholarly resources more freely available over the internet. Open Access Week is a global event where members of the academic and research community teach, learn, and share information about this publishing model.  Ohio State University will celebrate Open Access Week 2010 with programming throughout the week that starts October 18.  All programs are open to the public:

Monday, October 18

Brown bag on “green” (self-archiving) publishing options and authors’ rights.

Science and Engineering Library, 175 W. 18th Ave., Room 070/090 from noon-1:00 p.m.

Tuesday, October 19

Dr. Rob Kirby, Professor of Mathematics at UC Berkeley and a member of the board of the non-profit Mathematical Sciences Publishers, will speak on affordable, sustainable models of scholarly publishing.

Thompson Library, Room 165, 1858 Neil Ave. Mall, 10:30 a.m.-noon

This talk will be streamed live.  Go to http://go.osu.edu/openaccess on October 19 to connect to the stream.

Wednesday, October 20

Brown bag on Creative Commons licensing.

Knowlton School of Architecture, 275 W. Woodruff Ave., Room 258, noon-1:00 p.m.

Wednesday, October 20

Pat Furlong will speak to the community on the importance of open access publishing for patient and family information and education.  Ms. Furlong is Founding President and CEO of Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), a foundation that focuses on research, advocacy, education, and compassion for individuals affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Worthington Public Library (Old Worthington), 820 High Street, Worthington, OH 7:00-8:30 p.m.

Please park on the street or in Worthington’s city public parking areas.

Thursday, October 21

Pat Furlong will hold a second talk for university faculty students, and staff on the importance of open access publishing for patient and family information and education.

Science and Engineering Library, 175 W. 18th Ave., Room 070/090 from 10:30 a.m.-noon.

For more information, visit http://go.osu.edu/openaccess or contact Anne Gilliland, anne.gilliland@osumc.edu.

Open Access Week at Ohio State University is sponsored by the Prior Health Sciences Library, University Libraries, the Knowlton School of Architecture, and the OSU Department of Mathematics.  It is supported with a Learning Technology grant from the Digital Union.  In addition, this project has been funded in whole or in part with federal funds from the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, under Contract No. N01-LM6-3503 with the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Stevie Wonder @ WIPO

Stevie Wonder urges the World Intellectual Property Organization to adopt copyright rules that facilitate information access for the disabled.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JDmciPtYG8[/youtube]

Save the Date for Open Access Week 2010

Open access publishing is a movement that encourages making scholarly resources more freely available over the internet. The goal is to maximize the impact of research, particularly research that has been funded with public money.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PTuxVQbVTA[/youtube]

In 2010, Open Access Week will be October 18-24.   Save the date for this year’s programs, which will include:

  • Monday, October 18.  Brown bag seminar, Sciences and Engineering Library, 090/070 from noon-1:00 p.m. on “green” (self-archiving) publishing options and authors’ rights;
  • Tuesday October 19,  Dr. Rob Kirby, Professor of Mathematics at UC Berkeley and a member of the board of the non-profit Mathematical Sciences Publishers, will speak on affordable, sustainable models of scholarly publishing.  Thompson Library, 165, 10:30 a.m.-noon;
  • Wednesday, October 20.  Brown bag seminar at Knowlton School of Architecture on Creative Commons licensing, noon-1:00 p.m.;
  • Wednesday, October 20.  Pat Furlong will speak to the community on the importance of open access publishing for patient and family information and education.  Ms. Furlong is Founding President and CEO of Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), a foundation that focuses on research, advocacy, education, and compassion for individuals affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy.  Worthington Public Library (Old Worthington) 7:00-8:30 p.m.;
  • Thursday, October 21.  Pat Furlong will hold a second talk for university faculty students, and staff on the importance of open access publishing for patient and family information and education.  10:30 a.m.-noon.

For more information on 2010 Open Access programming contact,  Anne Gilliland.

OSU Open Access Week programming is sponsored by the University Libraries, Prior Health Sciences Library, the National Library of Medicine, the Learning Technology Grants of the Digital Union, the Knowlton School of Architecture, and the OSU Department of Mathematics.

What is a DMCA Exemption? Can It Be Appealed?

The exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) that the Register of Copyrights announced last month have garnered much publicity, especially the one that dealt with jailbreaking iPhones.  In the university community, the exemption that deals with educational video has also gotten some press.  But what is a DMCA exemption anyway?  And, as one of my first correspondents on this subject asked, is there an appeals process once an exemption is issued.

The DMCA, which was passed in 1998 and became part of various sections of the federal copyright law, contains provisions that address issues of copyright in the digital age, and, in some instances, brought us into line with international intellectual property treaties.  Some of its most notable sections are the anti-circumvention provisions, which forbid breaking copy-protection mechanisms on digital media.  These provisions are in force non-infringing uses, such as those allowed under fair use.  However, the law also allows the Register of Copyrights to recommend that the Librarian of Congress issue exemptions to the anti-circumvention statutes every three years.  Exemptions stay in force for the next three years and must be renewed in order to continue beyond that period.

Can an exemption be appealed?  There is no precedent one way or another.   Some observers believe that, rather than litigate, Apple’s way of dealing with the jailbreaking exemption will be a patent application for systems and methods that will allow the company to detect whether an unknown third party has tampered with a device and take corrective action in response.

Happy Birthday, EFF

This month, the Electronic Frontier Foundation celebrated its 20th birthday  The Foundation does very important, interesting policy and legal work in the areas of free speech, innovation, intellectual property, global issues, transparency, and privacy in the electronic age.  This cartoon by Nina Paley shows, concisely and in graphical form, what the EFF is all about.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W04LFvH1K8Y[/youtube]  

Digital Media Collective Intellectual Property Interest Group

The next Digital Media Collective meeting will take place at 11:00am on May 11, in Thompson Library Room 165 when Trisha Davis from the University Libraries’ Copyright Help Center and Anne Gilliland from the Health Sciences Copyright Management Office kick off the new DMC Intellectual Property Interest Group!

Anne and Trisha will discuss recent cases and controversies in intellectual property related to higher education as well as the copyright help services available at OSU.  If you are interested in participating in the Digital Media Collective’s Intellectual Property Interest Group, please plan to attend. Future events will be posted to the DMC email list and the Intellectual Property Interest Group page on the DMC wiki.

Questions? Contact: Anne Gilliland

“Among the Least Efficient Property Systems Known to Man”

For someone who has followed Lawrence Lessig’s career for a while and read his work, there was little new in his Wireside chat last Thursday.    The Open Video Alliance streamed the chat around the world, and, locally, members of the Ohio State University had a chance to watch it at Thompson Library.  Lessig touched on his usual themes: the harm to society and culture that comes from long copyright terms; the  importance of remix in our life today; and his decision, after losing Eldred v. Ashcroft,  to concentrate on combating political corruption.    His presentation followed his usual style as well and was filled with audio and image clips from a variety of sources.  My favorite comment is one I first read in his “For the Love of Culture” essay in The New Republic–“Copyright is among the least efficient property systems known to man.”

But the fact that these are not new points for Lessig doesn’t make them less true.  When a video of his talk was uploaded to YouTube, the audio track was first removed and then restored when Lessig filed a counterclaim, on the basis of fair use.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JIp3yStpmg[/youtube]

Lessig Chat: Fair Use and Politics in the Digital Age

The Digital Media Collective, OSU Libraries Copyright Office, Health Sciences Copyright Management Office, and the Digital Union will host a screening of a live webcast by educator and author Lawrence Lessig on February 25, 2010, from 6:00 – 8:00pm in Thompson Library‘s 11th floor Campus Reading Room. Lessig’s talk, streamed live from the Harvard Berkman Center by the Open Video Alliance, will explore fair use and politics in the digital age. Join us for the webcast and post-cast facilitated discussion!

The discussion immediately following the webcast will be facilitated by Peter M. Shane, Professor at the College of Law. Shane is the Jacob E. Davis and Jacob E. Davis II Chair in Law at OSU’s Moritz College of Law. He served as executive director to the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy, and was the principal drafter of its report, Informing Communities: Sustaining Democracy in the Digital Age (2009). An internationally recognized authority on public law, he co-chairs with Professor Stephen Coleman of the University of Leeds, the International Working Group on Online Consultation and Public Policy Making (IWG). His books include Madison’s Nightmare: Executive Power and the Threat to American Democracy (2009); Peter M. Shane, ed., Democracy Online: The Prospects for Political Renewal through the Internet (2004); and Peter M. Shane, John Podesta and Richard C. Leone, eds., A Little Knowledge: Privacy, Security and Public Information After September 11 (2004). He is a graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School.

See the Open Video Alliance website for more info about the chat.

Seating will be limited to the first 120 people, so come early! Refreshments will be provided.

Contact Lorrie McAllister (mcallister.50@osu.edu) for more info or questions.

Copyright and Football

Now there’s a combination most people don’t think about together.

Recently the NFL sent cease-and-desist letters to a number of New Orleans t-shirt manufacturers, claiming that the shirts, which depicted the New Orleans Saints “Who Dat” slogan and the team’s fleur-de-lis emblem, violated the league’s copyright and trademarks.  Irate fans and merchants protested. Louisiana politicians got in on the act.  Sen. David Vitter notified the NFL that he intended to print “Who Dat” t-shirts himself and Rep. Charlie Melancon, who is running for Vitter’s seat,  issued a petition in support of the beleaguered merchants.

Now the Louisiana Attorney General has brought an end to the controversy.  Fans can use the “Who Dat” slogan and the fleu-de-lis as along as items are not represented as NFL-licensed merchandise.

Here at OSU, contact Ohio State University Trademark and Licensing if you have questions about using Buckeye logos or emblems.

Data Privacy Day 2010

Data Privacy Day is January 28.  It’s not a copyright issue, but definitely something that involves the law and libraries.  For example, here is a report on a related conference Reader Privacy:  Should Library Privacy Standards Apply in the Digital World, which discusses reader privacy for ebooks and proposed priacy standards for books available through Google Book Search.

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