Thursday, January 17, 2008

EPL and Open Access Articles

EPL and Open Access Articles, Europhysics Letters, January 2008. A "Publishers' Note" from the six-person EPL Management Committee. Excerpt:

In May 2007 the EPLA [Europhysics Letters Association] Board of Directors welcomed the CERN initiative for the creation of a Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics (SCOAP3) and agreed to enter into negotiations to enable high energy physics papers to be published in EPL with selective open access.

At a subsequent meeting in August 2007, the Board decided to offer substantial initial discount while open access remained a small fraction of the content of EPL. A necessary precursor to negotiation with SCOAP3 is a general open access policy. The Directors agreed that this policy should offer a free-to-read option for all authors in all sections of EPL and so provide fair opportunities across the broad range of physics covered by EPL. The policy for the journal should allow individual authors, their institutions, funding agencies or sponsoring consortia to pay for published articles to be freely available to all, permanently....

EPL would remain a subscription journal for content that is not free to read and authors, institutions or funding agencies may choose to pay for their articles to be open access.

As an initial step in this open access venture, a single-article fee of € 1000 ($ 1330) can now be paid by individuals who choose to have their article published free to all. This pricing, which is substantially discounted, ensures that EPL remains competitive with other similar journals. EPL will continue to ensure this policy is sustainable although the journal must remain financially viable and the pricing scheme will be under continual review.

At this stage we welcome enquires concerning an institutional membership fee that would allow that institute to pay in advance for open access publications in EPL for authors from that institute....

Remember all articles are already free to read for 30 days from their online publication date....

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Maine law students enter battle on downloading, against record labels

 

Maine law students enter battle on downloading, against record labels

By TREVOR MAXWELL
Blethen Maine Newspapers  01/07/2008

Lisa Chmelecki and Hannah Ames, friends and third-year students at the University of Maine School of Law in Portland, had never studied copyright law before a few months ago, and were unfamiliar with a historic legal battle brewing on college campuses nationwide.

Now they're right in the middle of it.

Chmelecki and Ames, under the supervision of Professor Deirdre Smith, are defending two college students who have been sued for copyright infringement by the Recording Industry Association of America. The cases came to them through the law school's legal aid clinic, which provides representation to low-income residents.

Chmelecki and Ames filed briefs last month in federal court, and are waiting for a judge to rule on their motion to dismiss the cases against their clients.

They argue that the digital information used by the recording industry to bring the lawsuits falls short of a new legal standard, set by the U.S. Supreme Court in a decision in May.

"We're defending the process," said Ames, 25, a Harpswell native. "The RIAA needs to follow the rules, the same way everyone else needs to." Their involvement in the case has captured national attention from lawyers, bloggers and others who intensely follow technology law. The upcoming decision could set a precedent for other students facing RIAA lawsuits. It's all part of a larger debate about the future of information and the Internet.

"There are a lot of law students all across the country, who are just sitting there, being envious of what is happening in Maine," said Ray Beckerman, a New York City lawyer who has emerged as the chief opponent of the recording industry.

Beckerman said this is the first time a university's legal aid clinic has assisted any of the hundreds of college students taken to court for copyright infringement in the past 10 months.

The Recording Industry Association of America - the trade group for music giants like Sony, Warner Bros. and Capitol Records - launched a litigation campaign against college students last February. The industry claims it loses billions each year to illegal file-sharing, and much of the activity happens on campus.

Cara Duckworth, a spokeswoman for the RIAA, said courts have consistently accepted the industry's practices and arguments. She said the industry has prevailed in almost every instance in which attorneys have moved to dismiss a case or quash a subpoena.

"I think that speaks in and of itself," Duckworth said. "We have followed the letter of the law."

The industry monitors the Internet and captures data from computers where copyrighted music files are available for others to download.

Lawyers for the industry then ask colleges to forward notification letters to the students whose accounts are red-flagged. At that point, the industry still does not have the names of the computer users.

Students can settle with a cash payment. If they don't, the industry files a "John Doe" lawsuit and gets a court order that forces colleges to release the name. Settlements generally range between $3,000 and $5,000, and hundreds of students have chosen that route.

The RIAA filed "John Doe" lawsuits against 26 students in Maine last March, and against another 27 in October. Many have settled, and others remain in various stages within the federal court system. None has gone to trial.

Two of the students called for help from the Cumberland Legal Aid Clinic, a project of the University of Maine School of Law.

The clinic allows third-year students to practice law, working for low-income clients who otherwise would not be able to afford representation. The students are supervised and must follow special rules within the state and federal courts.

Chmelecki and Ames were assigned to the copyright infringement cases. They were unique to the clinic, which mostly handles criminal and family matters such as divorce and child custody.

Although they did not have a background in copyright law, Chmelecki said she and Ames approached the cases with the same intensity as they would any other matter.

They worked late nights and weekends, while at the same time studying for final exams, and working as interns for the Cumberland County District Attorney's Office. They started by reviewing the basics of copyright law and waded into the complex nuances of U.S. Supreme Court decisions.

"As a student, you just want to do the absolute best job that you can," said Chmelecki, 34, a former reporter for the Lewiston Sun Journal. She praised the legal aid clinic and its director, Professor Smith, for giving them the opportunity to practice the lessons they learn in the classroom.

Chmelecki, Ames and Smith also consulted with Bob Mittel, of the Portland firm MittelAsen LLC. Mittel has represented several of the Maine students over the past year, including eight of the unnamed defendants sued in October. Mittel said they discussed strategy, but credited Chmelecki and Ames for doing their own work and delivering a strong argument to U.S. District Judge John Woodcock.

"It's great," Mittel said. "What Deirdre Smith did here is just very special, getting those kids into a situation where they could start to lift off the ground, in a very nice context."

Chmelecki said that even when she and Ames were researching and drafting their briefs for the cases, they had no idea about the larger controversy surrounding the RIAA lawsuits, and the intense public interest. Journalists and bloggers from around the country have been calling the clinic's office to discuss the cases.

"I'm glad I didn't know," Chmelecki said. "Writing the briefs would have been a lot more difficult for me, under that kind of pressure."

Maine law students enter battle on downloading, against record labels

NOT-OD-08-033: Revised Policy on Enhancing Public Access to Archived Publications Resulting from NIH-Funded Research

NOT-OD-08-033: Revised Policy on Enhancing Public Access to Archived Publications Resulting from NIH-Funded Research 

Revised Policy on Enhancing Public Access to Archived Publications Resulting from NIH-Funded Research


Notice Number: NOT-OD-08-033

Key Dates
Release Date:   January 11, 2008
Effective Date:  April 7, 2008

Issued by
National Institutes of Health (NIH), (http://www.nih.gov/)

Department of Health and Human Services
Action
Notice; Revised Policy Statement
Summary

In accordance with Division G, Title II,  Section 218 of PL 110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 ), the NIH voluntary Public Access Policy (NOT-OD-05-022) is now mandatory. The law states:

The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

Specifics

  1. The NIH Public Access Policy applies to all peer-reviewed articles that arise, in whole or in part, from direct costs 1 funded by NIH, or from NIH staff, that are accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008. 
  1. Institutions and investigators are responsible for ensuring that any publishing or copyright agreements concerning submitted articles fully comply with this Policy.
  1. PubMed Central (PMC) is the NIH digital archive of full-text, peer-reviewed journal articles.  Its content is publicly accessible and integrated with other databases (see: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/).
  1. The final, peer-reviewed manuscript includes all graphics and supplemental materials that are associated with the article. 
  1. Beginning May 25, 2008, anyone submitting an application, proposal or progress report to the NIH must include the PMC or NIH Manuscript Submission reference number when citing applicable articles that arise from their NIH funded research. This policy includes applications submitted to the NIH for the May 25, 2008 due date and subsequent due dates.

Compliance

Compliance with this Policy is a statutory requirement and a term and condition of the grant award and cooperative agreement, in accordance with the NIH Grants Policy Statement For contracts, NIH includes this requirement in all R&D solicitations and awards under Section H, Special Contract Requirements, in accordance with the Uniform Contract Format.

Inquiries

Send questions concerning this Notice or other aspects of the NIH Public Access Policy to:

Office of Extramural Research
National Institutes of Health
1 Center Drive, Room 144
Bethesda, MD  20892-0152
Email:  PublicAccess@nih.gov
Website: http://publicaccess.nih.gov

1Costs that can be specifically identified with a particular project or activity. NIH Grants Policy Statement, Rev. 12/2003; http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/nihgps_2003/NIHGPS_Part2.htm#_Toc54600040

NOT-OD-08-033: Revised Policy on Enhancing Public Access to Archived Publications Resulting from NIH-Funded Research

Is Copyright Protection only for those who can afford the legal fees? - Duke City Fix

 Is Copyright Protection only for those who can afford the legal fees? - Duke City Fix

"Now I want the recipe.... Similar to Duke in a way... what to do when your copyright is violated.???... I hope that she doesn't come after me as I reprinted the entire article.... "HSM

Is Copyright Protection only for those who can afford the legal fees?

 

Last month, I picked up a copy of New Mexico WOMAN magazine, and discovered my recipe for Cheeseburger Soup on page 32. They printed it without my permission, and credited it to their columnist, Beth Donahue.

I found it under this headline, "Recipes- New Mexico WOMAN’s staff and writers are spilling their secrets—their holiday secrets that is, and if you’re looking for a dish to impress your friends or family, maybe one of these recipes will make you the prized host."

In case you’ve never seen it before, New Mexico WOMAN one of those "free" magazines you can pick up in the racks outside of Wal-Mart.

Fortunately, I still had a copy of the email I sent to Donahue when she requested the recipe. It never occurred to me that she would try to claim it as her own creation.

The Cheeseburger Soup recipe printed in New Mexico WOMAN is virtually identical to my email.

To make matters worse, I planned to submit my Cheeseburger Soup in a series of recipe contests. Now I can’t do that because once a recipe is published, it’s ineligible as a contest entry.

Since recipes, like other forms of intellectual property, are protected by copyright, I write a letter to New Mexico WOMAN Publisher Jill Duval explaining what has happened. I ask her to contact me ASAP so we can resolve the situation (you can see the actual letter in my last blog entry).

I wait 10 days, and there’s no response from Duval. I start calling the New Mexico WOMAN business office leaving messages, and after a couple of days, she returns my call.

I’m a former advertising and publishing executive, so I have a good idea what’s going to happen. Since I can prove the recipe is my original creation, she probably will apologize about the error, offer to reprint it crediting me as the actual author, and suggest a token sum in the form of compensation.

Except that’s not what she offers to do.

She offers to do nothing. She’s dismissive about the whole thing since "it’s just a recipe".

Duval says she will not apologize in writing for printing my recipe, because they did nothing wrong since they believed it was Donahue’s recipe when it appeared in the December issue.

Duval maintains they will not print a correction naming me as the actual author, because New Mexico WOMAN magazine doesn’t reprint material they have already published.

Naturally, she also refuses to discuss compensating me for my loss.

Obviously, this is all about money. Duval doesn’t want to issue a correction because she’ll have to pay me for my creative work.

I think she believes there’s nothing I can do about it, unless I get an attorney. She also figures that no lawyer will want to take the case because "it’s just a recipe".

What do you think about Duval’s response? Are we all equal under the law, or is copyright protection only for those who can afford the legal fees?

Is Copyright Protection only for those who can afford the legal fees? - Duke City Fix

Techdirt: Do You Actually Understand What Copyright Is For?

 Techdirt: Do You Actually Understand What Copyright Is For?

"Draws together many of the recent posts explaining the history and background of copyright -- HSM"

 

Do You Actually Understand What Copyright Is For?

from the most-people-don't dept

One of the more amazing things I've discovered in discussing copyright, patents and trademarks with people is that very few people seem to know what each of those three sets of regulations are actually intended for. It certainly makes reasonable discussion and debate on any sort of reform difficult when a large percentage of people involved in the debate (or, tragically, writing the laws around those regulations) seem to believe the purpose of them is entirely different than it actually is. That's why we've tried to point to some historically interesting discussions on these regulations. Two recent blog posts pointed out something interesting related to all this. The first, comes (again) from copyright expert William Patry, who points to a seven minute video of ordinary people explaining why they think copyright exists. The video itself is by Karl Fogel, who also runs a site called Question Copyright. What the video pretty clearly demonstrates is that most people have no clue why copyright exists, and many assume (as we see in the comments around here) that it's there to "protect" the content creator or to prevent plagiarism. No one seems to note that its true purpose, as per the Constitution, is to promote progress (amusingly, many believe copyright is a much more recent creation).

Techdirt: Do You Actually Understand What Copyright Is For?

Librarian: Ohio State Professors Need Copyright Refresher - Chronicle.com

Librarian: Ohio State Professors Need Copyright Refresher - Chronicle.com 

Librarian: Ohio State Professors Need Copyright Refresher

Beware of faculty members who are clueless about whether they hold the copyrights to their research papers, Trisha Davis, a librarian at Ohio State University, told a group of librarians today at the midwinter conference of the American Library Association.

She made the remark while discussing the challenges Ohio State faced in building an institutional repository. The university has over 21,000 articles — including conference papers, teaching materials, photographs, and multimedia works — in the archive.

Faculty members will submit research papers to the repository often unaware that they have signed away the rights to their work to a journal publisher, Ms. Davis said. “They are stunned that they have not retained the copyrights,” she said. “They’re vehemently adamant” that they still have rights to the work.

Also, she added, faculty members sometimes add other scholars’ material to the repository, incorrectly assuming that this is allowed under fair use. — Andrea L. Foster

Librarian: Ohio State Professors Need Copyright Refresher - Chronicle.com

MIT Libraries News » Blog Archive » Details of Revised NIH Public Access Policy Published

"From MIT -- Details on the recently passes open access manadate for NIH.......HSM "

Details of Revised NIH Public Access Policy Published

Posted January 15th, 2008 by Ellen Duranceau

pmclogo.gif
The National Institutes of Health (NIH), as previously reported, was directed by new legislation to mandate open access to all peer-reviewed journal articles published as a result of NIH grant funds, through PubMed Central, the digital archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature. NIH has now revised its home page, FAQ, and Public Access Policy, describing the new mandatory submission process.

Details that may be of interest to the MIT community:

  • TIMING: The policy applies to all peer-reviewed articles that are accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008.
  • PUBLISHER AGREEMENTS & COPYRIGHT: From the FAQ: “Authors should work with the publisher before any rights are transferred to ensure that all conditions of the NIH Public Access Policy can be met. Authors should avoid signing any agreements with publishers that do not allow the author to comply with the NIH Public Access Policy.”
    • A publisher’s compliance with the NIH policy can be checked by reviewing the SHERPA site.
    • The NIH suggests some possible language that can be used to modify a publisher’s agreement: ““Journal acknowledges that Author retains the right to provide a copy of the final manuscript to the NIH upon acceptance for Journal publication, for public archiving in PubMed Central as soon as possible but no later than 12 months after publication by Journal.”
    • MIT offers authors an amendment to publisher agreements that was developed to support MIT authors who wanted to comply with the original NIH policy. The amendment language allows authors to comply with the revised policy as well. Download the amendment.
    • The new policy does not change the author’s copyrights’ status. The author can still “assign [copyrights] to journals, subject to the limited right that must be retained…to post the works in accordance with the Policy” in PubMed Central.
  • PUBLICATION COSTS: NIH will reimburse for publication costs, including author fees. (Some journals charge article processing fees for articles that will be made openly available.  NIH’s policy is to cover such costs.)
  • POSTING TO PubMed Central: Posting is required even if you publish in an open access journal, or if the article is freely accessible on the publisher’s website.

For further information about the new NIH policy, or using the MIT amendment, please consult the Scholarly Publication website, or contact:

Ellen Finnie Duranceau / Scholarly Publishing & Licensing Consultant / MIT Libraries / x38483 / efinnie@mit.edu

MIT Libraries News » Blog Archive » Details of Revised NIH Public Access Policy Published

Publishing Frontier » Blog Archive » The Baby and the Bath Water

"Very interesting look at the world of academic presses and open access, I would hope (trust) that the Univ of Pittsburgh has done their homework on where their sales come from, in that they know whether the frontlist or the backlist is the driving force in maintinaing sustainability.....Didn't spend too much time trying to get the author's creditinals......Sorry, HSM  "

The Baby and the Bath Water

The University of Pittsburgh Press has just made an extraordinary announcement. The Press plans to make its entire backlist available for free online two years after formal, print publication. Here is what the AAUP newsletter has to say about this:

Recently, the University of Pittsburgh Press has announced that it is working to make its entire back catalog available online, free of charge, through Pitt’s University Library System (ULS). New titles will be added to UPP Digital Editions, part of ULS’s D-Scribe program, after the books have been in print for two years.

The reason this is extraordinary is that it violates the basic economic principle of book publishing, namely, you lose money on frontlist and make money (sometimes) on the backlist. Pittsburgh’s program will over time (it won’t happen overnight) erode backlist sales, reduce the Press’s income, and thus make it more difficult for the Press to underwrite new books. (I don’t know the specifics of the Press’s financial situation, but if it is like most other university presses, part of its operations are subsidized by its parent institution. Having said that, revenue from book sales, especially of the backlist, is surely part of its overall economic picture.)

Backlist sales are the bedrock of book publishing economics, and they are tied to an important corollary: Good books backlist, bad books disappear. (Yes, the term “backlist” is a verb as well as a noun. Publishers are not always the most zealous guardians of the language.) It may be that Pittsburgh is not concerned about the erosion of backlist sales because they don’t have any. If so, then what appears on the surface to be an open access initiative may in fact be the outcome of undistinguished editorial judgment.

There is a fundamental difference between book sales and the subscription sales of academic journals. Most revenue for journals are for current issues. Thus many journal publishers now make their backlists or backfiles, as they are called, open access after six months or one year; sometimes this form of open access is mandated by funding agencies. The revenue loss to such journal publishers is likely to be negligible. The economics of book publishing and journal publishing are precisely the reverse of one another. It would make more sense for a book publisher to post new books for free online for six months and then charge for them thereafter. (The ratio of frontlist to backlist sales varies by publisher, subject category, author, and publishing segment.)

This is not to say that open access cannot be used to help to sell books. One of the real innovators in this regard is a contributor to the Publishing Frontier blog, Michael Jensen of National Academies Press. NAP has done extensive testing of the relationship between open access material and the sale of books, whether in print or digital form. Shrewd publishers can and should learn from NAP. I advise all my clients to test various forms of open access as a form of product sampling. Unfortunately, there is no evidence that Pittsburgh has put into place the various marketing techniques that have enabled NAP to experiment with open access and still manage its operation responsibly.

The AAUP uses the word “innovation” in its story about Pittsburgh. Wrong word, I believe. Somewhat paradoxically, the Press’s initiative is a bet that digital media don’t matter. I believe the opposite, that digital media matter very much and that the flirtation with hybrid models that marry print to electronics is a useful but transitory phase; in the end (I won’t predict when that will be) all publishing will be digital. Pittsburgh is counting on print and electronics occupying parallel universes forever, where one medium does not effect the other (except, perhaps, positively, but this is wishful thinking). This is myopia, not innovation.

The University of Pittsburgh Press has started down the slippery slope. While it may receive some support from its parent now, over time that support will grow until all the costs for the Press must be covered by the parent. The parent may then decide, as many universities have already determined, that the support for the Press is too great. Support gets cut back, the number of books published then drops, and scholars everywhere lament the fact that there are fewer and fewer outlets for their work. No one should be surprised when commercial publishers increase their presence in academic publishing, picking off the most profitable programs. This is not a way to build a university press, nor is it a harbinger of a bright future for scholarly communications. Open access is not an innovation but one aspect of a complex marketing program. I wish the University of Pittsburgh Press had such a program in place.

Publishing Frontier » Blog Archive » The Baby and the Bath Water

Scholarly Communications @ Duke » Caveat emptor!

"Very interesting....I would think that Duke should pursue this matter in terms of protecting their copyright for the entire collection......It sets a bad example. Possibly they should watermark the digital objects and then allow users to get unmarked images once they agree to a creative commons type of license..OR You could just make an auction item using all the same terminology as the seller and make it very clear that the images are free and where to get them.... I don't think e-bay ahs a copyright policy like youtube but I know they have a policy regarding stolen goods --- you could aproach them from that angle, since you haven't received any response from the seller." Just my $ 0.02 HSM

Caveat emptor! January 15, 2008

Posted by Kevin Smith in : Open Access and Institutional Repositories, Scholarly Publishing , trackback

This posting on the NY Times Technology blog – “On eBay, Some Profit by Selling What’s Free” – caught my eye over the holidays because it recounts a situation very similar to one in which we have found ourselves at my university. The post describes the experience of purchasing an old film from an eBay vendor only to discover later on that the entire film is available for free download from the Internet Archive site. The author is unsure whether to feel cheated, since he paid for something he could have obtained for free, or to recognize that the vendor had earned his fee by finding material the author wanted but would not have found himself. Both the vendor involved and Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive, basically take the latter position, with Kahle pointing out that no one is getting rich doing this while expressing the wish that more creative, transformative uses were being made of the older material.

At Duke we have been struggling to deal with a very similar situation. A great deal of effort went in to the creation of digital collections feature lots of wonderful material in our collections on the history of advertising. So our staff was understandably distressed to find out that an Internet entrepreneur had downloaded virtually the entire collection, which is mostly public domain images, and was selling the CDs through his own website and via eBay intermediaries. It is a well-established principle of copyright law, of course, that “sweat of the brow” does not give one rights in a collection of facts or public domain material. Nevertheless, we were unhappy because we made the collections available in order to facilitate scholarship and research without barriers of place or fees for access; selling the material undermines our vision of the research purposes of the collection.

We finally decided to send a letter asking the vendor to stop selling this collection. We based our request on three claims – a compilation copyright in the whole collection, which was copied in its entirety with our selection and arrangement (and some commentary) intact; a fear that, because the Duke name appears in a few places, there might be confusion about our relationship with the vendor (there is no such relationship, in fact); and our concern that some of the images may still be protected by copyrights held by the donor who gave us the material in the first place. Most galling to us is the fact that the vendor who has appropriate this material himself claims, on the site, to hold a compilation copyright in the material.

So far our letter has been ignored, and the material is still available for sale. We are unsure if we want to take further steps or what those steps might be. We have no desire to impede the flow of information to people who want or need it. But we do want to uphold the value of free access to the public domain, and also to protect and value the intellectual efforts of our fine curators. Perhaps the best thing I can do is to use this space to encourage readers to check out the free digital displays of this fascinating material on the Emergence of Advertising in America website. And remind all that when someone offers to sell this kind of material that looks like it came from a library special collection, let the buyer beware!

http://library.duke.edu/blogs/scholcomm/2008/01/15/caveat-emptor/

The Promise of a Post-Copyright World | QuestionCopyright.org

The Promise of a Post-Copyright World | QuestionCopyright.org 

"I only posted part of this as it is rather long, but I think it makes some good points about the motivations behind the copyright legislation initiatives by following the money....I think it overly simplifies the role of the distibutor/publisher...it is somewhat like the movie industry -- Is there a need for a middle man who takes chances on books (authors), musicians, tv shows, and movies -- many of which fail?  Does there need to be a system in place where those who take chances on the "new" are rewarded such that they have the capital (taken from the successful) to offset the losses of the failures or less successful?  Food for thought......  I do agree that the pricing is out of line and so are many of the rules.  From past experience and also dating myself, in college most audiophiles would buy nothing but albums and immediately record them onto tape for their cars or to play in their room.  The general response was that the quality or tapes available for purchase by the record labels were so poor that the only way to get the best sound was to buy the album and copy it onto a high quality tape.  Is this a violation of copyright, probably -- you could bring up the archival issue which is allowed, but it is on a different medium.  If the record labels used the same quality blank tapes that were desired would we have purchased tapes?  Hard to say, but they were obviously squeezing every penny of sales by using the cheapest materials possible, of course these were the same companies who produced the cassette recorders and blank tapes, so...."  HSM

 

The Promise of a Post-Copyright World | QuestionCopyright.org

[This was one of the first articles to appear on QuestionCopyright.org. It's still a good in-depth introduction to what we're about, but if you need something shorter, see here instead, or try our FAQ.]

There is one group of people not shocked by the record industry's policy of suing randomly chosen file sharers: historians of copyright. They already know what everyone else is slowly finding out: that copyright was never about paying artists for their work, and that far from being designed to support creators, copyright was designed by and for distributors — that is, publishers, which today includes record companies. But now that the Internet has given us a world without distribution costs, it no longer makes any sense to restrict sharing in order to pay for centralized distribution. Abandoning copyright is now not only possible, but desirable. Both artists and audiences would benefit, financially and aesthetically. In place of corporate gatekeepers determining what can and can't be distributed, a much finer-grained filtering process would allow works to spread based on their merit alone. We would see a return to an older and richer cosmology of creativity, one in which copying and borrowing openly from others' works is simply a normal part of the creative process, a way of acknowledging one's sources and of improving on what has come before. And the old canard that artists need copyright to earn a living would be revealed as the pretense it has always been.

None of this will happen, however, if the industry has its way. For three centuries, the publishing industry has been working very hard to obscure copyright's true origins, and to promote the myth that it was invented by writers and artists. Even today, they continue to campaign for ever stronger laws against sharing, for international treaties that compel all nations to conform to the copyright policies of the strictest, and most of all to make sure the public never asks exactly who this system is meant to help.

The reward for these efforts can be seen in the public's reaction to the file-sharing lawsuits. While most people agree that this time the industry went too far, the error is mainly treated as one of degree — as if the record companies had a valid point, but had merely resorted to excessive force in making it.

To read the true history of copyright is to understand just how completely this reaction plays into the industry's hands. The record companies don't really care whether they win or lose these lawsuits. In the long run, they don't even expect to eliminate file sharing. What they're fighting for is much bigger. They're fighting to maintain a state of mind, an attitude toward creative work that says someone ought to own products of the mind, and control who can copy them. And by positioning the issue as a contest between the Beleaguered Artist, who supposedly needs copyright to pay the rent, and The Unthinking Masses, who would rather copy a song or a story off the Internet than pay a fair price, the industry has been astonishingly successful. They have managed to substitute the loaded terms "piracy" and "theft" for the more accurate "copying" — as if there were no difference between stealing your bicycle (now you have no bicycle) and copying your song (now we both have it). Most importantly, industry propaganda has made it a commonplace belief that copyright is how most creators earn a living — that without copyright, the engines of intellectual production would grind to a halt, and artists would have neither means nor motivation to produce new works.

Yet a close look at history shows that copyright has never been a major factor in allowing creativity to flourish. Copyright is an outgrowth of the privatization of government censorship in sixteenth-century England. There was no uprising of authors suddenly demanding the right to prevent other people from copying their works; far from viewing copying as theft, authors generally regarded it as flattery. The bulk of creative work has always depended, then and now, on a diversity of funding sources: commissions, teaching jobs, grants or stipends, patronage, etc. The introduction of copyright did not change this situation. What it did was allow a particular business model — mass pressings with centralized distribution — to make a few lucky works available to a wider audience, at considerable profit to the distributors.

The Promise of a Post-Copyright World | QuestionCopyright.org

Infoflows Corporation Demonstrates Its Fedmark(SM) System to Congressional Staff

Infoflows Corporation Demonstrates Its Fedmark(SM) System to Congressional Staff 

 

REDMOND, Wash., Jan 15, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Infoflows Corporation today announced its participation in the Technology and Orphan Works: The State of the Art event hosted by the Copyright Office in Washington, DC. Orphan works are copyrighted works whose owners are difficult or impossible to identify and locate. Focused on showcasing the most innovative new technologies likely to have a positive impact on the Orphan Works problem, Infoflows demonstrated its Fedmark Image and Video Services to Congressional staff members responsible for overseeing changes to Copyright Laws.

"We were very happy to be invited to this innovative event and commend the Copyright Office for being so diligent in its review of potential solutions to the Orphan Works problem," stated Steve Stone, CEO of Infoflows Corporation. "Fedmark offers content users an effective and east-to-use tool for making a diligent search to locate copyright owners."

In early 2006 after extensive study, the US Copyright Office recommended changes to existing copyright law that would provide limitations on damages awards and injunctions available to copyright owners if a prospective content user, prior to the commencement of use, performs a good faith, reasonably diligent search to locate the copyright owner yet is unable to locate the owner. "We are very pleased by the industry support from companies like Infoflows for this event, and believe that they, along with others, were able to show how technology can help address this problem," stated Marybeth Peters, Register of Copyrights in the US Copyright Office.

Infoflows launched the Fedmark platform in 2006. Based on the patented Handle System, the Fedmark Platform is a system for uniquely and persistently identifying, managing, and tracking digital objects. Supported by an easily managed user interface and the most powerful internet crawl technology available in the industry, Infoflows believes that Fedmark Video will become the standard for intellectual property protection for stock image content owners.

Infoflows (www.infoflows.com) is a software services company that provides digital content business intelligence services. Through the application of digital object recognition, search and advanced internet tracking technology, Infoflows is able to provide to our customers valuable business information on the use and abuse of their digital content. Infoflows is currently focused on the digital video, print publishing and the stock photography markets where our Fedmark(SM) Service enables customers to self monitor their licensed intellectual property. Led by recognized technology entrepreneurs, Infoflows is a privately held company headquartered in Redmond, Washington.

SOURCE Infoflows Corporation

http://www.infoflows.com




Infoflows Corporation Demonstrates Its Fedmark(SM) System to Congressional Staff

BioMed Central Blog : Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance publishes first open access articles

BioMed Central Blog : Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance publishes first open access articles 

Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance publishes first open access articles

The Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (JCMR) has published the first articles on BioMed Central’s open access publishing platform after its move from Taylor & Francis. JCMR, now in its tenth year, is the official journal of the Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance.

JCMR readers now have free, instant online access to all published articles, not only via BioMed Central’s website but also via  PubMed Central and other open access repositories. “Open access brings benefits to readers that are of utmost importance to science - free, unfettered and widespread access to all research,” says Editor-in-Chief Dudley Pennell. “Authors will benefit from faster publication cycles and a wider readership, leading to increased citation counts.” The online format also allows authors to publish colour images and embed movies at no extra cost, a great advantage in a field that relies heavily on high-quality image reproduction.

For further details regarding the journal’s move to open access publishing with BioMed Central please read the Editorial ‘Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance: Open access in 2008.

The first and only journal devoted exclusively to CMR, Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance includes basic and clinical research articles, technical notes, review articles, and editorial commentary on the research, design, development, and evaluation of magnetic resonance methods applied to the cardiovascular system.

BioMed Central publishes a growing number of journals affiliated with learned societies. In addition to the transfer of existing society journals, BioMed Central is also working with societies to launch new journals such as the forthcoming Journal of Foot & Ankle Research, the official journal of the Australasian Podiatry Council and the Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists (UK).

BioMed Central Blog : Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance publishes first open access articles

Science in the open

Science in the open

"Very interesting, esp the parts about bandwidth and the benefits of open access for 3dr world....also very good think piece about some of the things we take for granted....HSM"

Open Science and the developing world: Good intentions, bad implementation?

I spent last week in Cuba. I was there on holiday but my wife (who is a chemistry academic) was on a work trip to visit collaborators. This meant I had the opportunity to talk to a range of scientists and to see the conditions they work under. One of the strong arguments for Open Science (literature access, data, methods, notebooks) is that it provides access to scientists in less priviledged countries to both peer reviewed research as well as to the details of methodology that can enable them to carry out their science. I was therefore interested to see both what was available to them and whether they viewed our efforts in this area as useful or helpful. I want to emphasise that these people were doing good science in difficult circumstances by playing to their strengths and focussing on achievable goals. This is not second rate science, just science that is limited by access to facilities, reagents, and information.

Access to the literature

There is essentially no access to the subscriber-only literature.  Odd copies of journal issues are highly valued and many people get by by having visiting positions at institutes in the developed world. I talked to a few people about our protein ligation work and they were immensely grateful that this was published in an open access journal. However they were uncertain about publishing in open access journals due to the perceived costs.  While it is likely that they could get such costs waived I believe there is an issue of pride here in not wishing to take ‘charity’. Indeed, in the case of Cuba it may be illegal for US based open access publishers to provide such assistance. It would be interesting to know whether this is the case.

Overall though, it is clear that acccess to the peer reviewed literature is a serious problem for these people.  Open Access publishing provides a partial solution to this problem. I think to be effective it is important that this not be limited to self archving, as for reasons I will come back to, it is difficult for them to find such self archived papers. It is clear that mandating archival on a free access repository can help.

Access to primary data

Of more immediate interest to me was whether people with limited access to the literature saw value in having free access to the primary data in open notebooks. Again, people were grateful for the provision of access to information as this has the potential to make their life easier. When you have limited resources it is important to make sure that things work and that they produce publishable results. Getting details information on methodology of interest is therefore very valuable. Often the data that we take for granted is not available (fluorescence spectra, NMR, mass spectrometry) but details like melting points, colours, retention times can be very valuable.

There were two major concerns; one is a concern we regularly see, that of information overload. I think this is less of a concern as long as search engines make it possible to find information that is of interest. Work needs to be done on this but I think it is clear that some sort of cross between Google Scholar and Amazon’s recommendation system/Delicious etc. (original concept suggested by Neil Saunders) can deal with this.  The other concern, relating to them adopting  such approaches, was one that we have seen over and over again, that of ‘getting scooped’. Here though the context is subtley different and there is a measure of first world-developing world politics thrown in. These scientists are, understandably, very reluctant to publicise initial results because the way they work is methodical and slow. Very often the key piece of data required to make up a paper can only be obtained on apparatus that is not available in house or requires lengthy negotiations with potential overseas collaborators. By comparison it would often be trivially easy for a developed world laboratory to take the initial results and turn out the paper.

The usual flip side argument holds here; by placing an initial result in the public domain it may be easier for them to find a collaborator who can finish of the paper but I can understand their perspective. These are people struggling against enormous odds to stake out a place for themselves in the scientific community. The first world does not exactly have an outstanding record on acknowledging or even valuing work in developing countries so I can appreciate a degree of scepticism on their part. I hope that this may be overcome eventually but given that the assumption of most people in my own community is that by being open we are bound to be shafted I suspect we need to get our own house in order first.

The catch…

All of this is well and good. There are many real and potential benefits for scientists in the developing world if we move to more open styles of science communication. This is great, and I think it is a good argument for more openness. However there is a serious problem with the way we present this information and our reliance on modern web tools to do it. Its a very simple problem: bandwidth.

All of our blogs, our data, and indeed the open access literature is very graphics heavy. I actually tried to load up the front page of openwetware.org while sitting at the computer of the head of the department my wife was visiting (the department has two networked computers). Fifteen minutes later it was still loading.  The PLoS One front page was similarly sluggish. I get irritated if my download speeds drop below 500K/second, at home, and I will give up if they go down to 100K. We were seeing download rates of 44 bytes/second at the worst point. In some cases this can even make search engines unuseable making it near impossible to track down the self-archived versions of papers. Cuba is perhaps a special case because the US embargo means they have no access to the main transatlantic and North American cables, in effect the whole country is on a couple of bundles of phone lines, but I suspect that even while access is becoming more pervasive the penetration of reasonable levels of bandwidth is limited in the developing world.

The point of this is that access is about more than just putting stuff up, it is also about making it accessible. If we are serious about providing access, and expanding our networks to include scientists who do not have the advantages that we have, then this necessarily includes thinking about low bandwidth versions of the pages that provide information. I looked through PLoS One, openwetware, BioMedCentral, and couldn’t find a ‘text only version’ button on any of them (to be fair there isn’t one on our lab blog either).  I appreciate the need to present things in an appealling and useful format, and indeed the need to place advertising to diversify revenue streams. I guess the main point is not to assume that by making it available, that you are necessarily making it accessible. If universal accessibility is an important goal then some thought needs to go into alternative presentations.

Overall I think there are real benefits for these scientists when we make things available. The challenges shouldn’t put us off doing it but perhaps it is advisable to bear in mind the old saw; If you want to help people, make sure you find out what they need first.

Science in the open

Science in the open » Biosciences Federation Survey on Open Access - Please do this survey!

Science in the open » Biosciences Federation Survey on Open Access - Please do this survey! 

Biosciences Federation Survey on Open Access - Please do this survey!

Ok, having flagged up two surveys in my previous post I have now done the second one. It seems to be for anyone worldwide but I wanted to bring it to people’s attention because it further clouds the definition of Open Access, whether deliberately or through ignorance I can’t say.

Fairly early on we have the following question:

6. What do you understand by the term ‘Open Access’? (Tick all those that apply)

  • Journals that are free to the reader
  • Journals that are free to the author
  • Journals that charge the author
  • Copies of journal articles freely available online (other than in the journal itself)
  • Not sure
  • Never heard the term
  • Other (please give details)

BBB doesn’t seem to even exist as an option!
And then in the following panel;

Full Open Access (OA) journals are generally defined as journals that are free for everyone to read immediately on publication, whether the costs of publication are defrayed through author-side charges, or in some other way

Now, we can (and have) argued for a long time over definitions of OA and the role of BBB etc. But to not mention it at all does not seem helpful. Might I humbly suggest that all those who feel it appropriate do the survey and put something in the ‘Other’ box for Question 6?

The survey is at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=O8NxxhwFB2DQwDUvW183nw_3d_3d

I am assuming fair use for the purpose of criticism (this is significantly less than 5% of the full text of the survey).

Science in the open » Biosciences Federation Survey on Open Access - Please do this survey!

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Slashdot | Egypt to Copyright Pyramids and Sphynx

Slashdot | Egypt to Copyright Pyramids and Sphynx 

Egypt to Copyright Pyramids and Sphynx

Couldn't resist the humor on this one.....HSM

 

empaler writes "We all know the usual pro-copyright arguments. Most of them hinge on the fact that the individual or company that has a copyright needs an incentive to make something that is copyrightable, and therefore ensure a revenue stream in a period after the copyright has been granted. In a never-surpassed move, Egypt is working on legislation to extend copyright well above 3000 years — they are going to start claiming royalties for using likenesses of the Sphynx and the Pyramids. It is still unclear whether the original intent of the Pyramids included 'making sure them bastards pay for a plastic copy in 3000 years' alongside 'securing a pathway to the heavens for the God King.' Speaking as a Greenlandic national, I want dibs on ice cubes." It sounds straight out of The Onion, but instead you can read another story on the BBC.

[+] humor, money, merrychristmas, goodluckwiththat, roflcopter (tagging beta)

Related Stories

Firehose:Egypt to Copyright Pyramids and Sphynx by empaler (130732)

Slashdot | Egypt to Copyright Pyramids and Sphynx

TLF: Copyright's Path

TLF: Copyright's Path 

Copyright’s Path

Works of authorship originate in private, safely kept under common law protections. Once published, however, expressive works become data ferae naturae—wild and natural information. As such, expressive works roam and reproduce freely. They may get captured in fixed copies, caged in atoms or bits. But the public, once it has absorbed an expressive work, generally retains relatively cheap access to it—unless and until copyright intervenes.

Copyright law limits public access to expressive works, herding them off the commons and into private hands. The Copyright Act offers a sort of ranch to authors, giving them a place to birth, raise, and sell their expressive works safe from the deprivations of grasping strangers. Authors enjoy those special privileges against the public not as a natural right, but rather solely thanks to a policy authorized by the U.S. Constitution and implemented through the Copyright Act. [The figure below] illustrates the path that copyright, together with some of its legal next-of-kin, takes from its origins towards its goals.

The Paths of IP

Expressive works begin as toll goods, excludable but non-rivalrous in consumption. In other words, an author can at first keep others from consuming her expressions thanks merely to her common law tort, property, and contract rights. She can keep her works in private, under lock and key, releasing them only upon solemn promises of secrecy. Those with whom she shares her work can enjoy it without at all decreasing her enjoyment of the same work; she can sing her song or study her painting just as well if others listen to or gaze on their own copies. That marks her work, like other works of authorship, as non-rivalrous in consumption. It retains that characteristic if and when she publishes the work, but then loses its excludability. Unless she were to somehow form and enforce a contract with everyone who encounters her published work—an unlikely prospect—only through copyright law could she protect her work from unauthorized access. Copyright steers published works back into toll good territory, empowering authors to assess fees and impose other limits on those who would use their works.

The Copyright Act’s privileges, because they restrict non-authors from freely copying a copyrighted work, defy natural and common law rights. That statutory negation of erstwhile public goods, however, arguably serves the public good. Though copyright restricts access to existing works of authorship, it encourages new ones.

[NB: The above text comes from chapter 1, § A of my draft book, Intellectual Privilege: Copyright, Common Law, and the Common Good. I will soon upload a PDF of the entire chapter, including footnotes. I welcome your comments.]

[Crossposted to Intellectual Privilege and Agoraphilia]

Posted by Tom W. Bell on Dec. 27, 2007 | Digg It! Reddit
Categories: Copyright

Comments

Perhaps I missed repeated use of the term "rivalrous" in another chapter, but if you could replace the term rivalrous with a more commonly used, the chart would be easier to understand.

Thanks for posting these; I have been enjoying them.

Posted by: Greg Touchton on December 27, 2007 4:55 AM

Nice post, well done.

...This is not a corner kick away from a paper I published in late 2006, titled "is the price of recorded music heading for zero?" and available here:

www.mcps-prs-alliance.co.uk/economics

My paper neatly sets up the 2x2 matrix and walks the reader through where the physical cd used to belong (private good) and where its contents now appear (public good) to many torrent tracking teens and upwards.

What I try to do is to get people thinking about an effecient toll, in the economic sense, as opposed to an enforceable toll in the legal sense.

Since publishing the paper, much of my work has been on the secondary 'black' market, and I would refer you to a second short paper titled 'Album Base' which I co-wrote with Paul Sanders, (one of the best brains I've ever met when dealing with these complex issues). This will offer a useful tool for understanding the options that might exist when thinking about an effective and effecient toll, which allows creators to be compensated.

Given its a tech audience, I'd warn that your book risks talking to the converted, but ignoring those you need to understand. Copyright and Tech work in different environments, at different tempos and often have assymetric objectives. To prevent your book from becoming another "also ran" (there are many) you really need to bridge that divide. MTV is a classic example, as they built a massive ad funded business on 'free music' without comensating the creators who's works arguabley drove the business. That should help let the penny drop... Its a supply chain issue. Again, I'd highlight the work of Paul Sander's Play Louder project as one such example - but it aint been easy.

Lastly, don't let music dominate your thinking. I'm biased, for obvious reasons, but you will find that the problems the music bizniz has been grappling with for the past decade are already begining to filter into television (check www.tioti.com for a very interesting development), film and printed press.

Happy to offer comments on your first draft if it helps, best of luck!

WP

Ps: believe me, the term rivalrous is a night mare, why not opt with "scarce/ non scarce" and apply a healthy footnote.

Posted by: will page on December 27, 2007 9:46 AM

In reviewing the recently posted articles, a thought occurred to me; copyright only benefits a segment of those creating expressive works, specifically those who have established a demand for their products.

In reading the posts on copyright on this forum and others, it is often pointed out that the major problem faced by many aspiring authors is creating name recognition, not the protection of their work. Hence to create name recognition and product demand, the authors give their work away and depend on other merchandising tactics to generate their income.

Additionally, there is the issue that for many artistic producers there may simply be no public demand for their work: poor quality, socially unacceptable, etc.

Copyright, for those who have not yet achieved a certain critical mass of public acceptance is irrelevant ("Why to Call Copyright "Privilege""). Common law, though I am not a lawyer, may hold a greater degree of relevance for those in the process of establishing themselves.

I hope that you may be able to incorporate the concept that copyright is not meaningful for the segment of creative producers who have yet established a public demand for their creative work.

Posted by: Steve R. on December 27, 2007 11:15 AM

Greg: I didn't define "non-rivalrous" earlier, but rather tried to explain it in the paragraph following the graphic. I guess it didn't exactly pop out, so maybe I should work on that. Thanks for the feedback.

Will: I've never before heard the expression, "This is not a corner kick away," but I think I understand you! Thanks for the tip to your interesting paper, which touts some very nice graphics. I'll have to think about your suggestion that I relegate "non-rivalrous" to a footnote. You are surely right that it would trip up some readers. At the same time, though, I don't want to miss the chance to communicate clearly with folks more used to the technical term.

Steve: Thanks for that suggestion. This chapter will elsewhere include some discussion of what common law can (and cannot) do for authors. With luck, that will help to cover some of the points you raise.

Posted by: on December 28, 2007 5:18 AM

TLF: Copyright's Path

How to copyright Michelangelo [printer-friendly] | The Register

 How to copyright Michelangelo [printer-friendly] | The Register

I always wondered about this issues.... i.e. how can something thousands of years old be copyrighted....

Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/12/27/how_to_copyright_michelangelo/

How to copyright Michelangelo

By Charles Eicher

Published Thursday 27th December 2007 08:02 GMT

Some of the world's greatest artworks are turning into copyrighted properties.Five hundred years ago, Michelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Today, those images are copyrighted. How can ancient cultural icons become commercial properties, centuries after they fall into the public domain?

How this happened is a story that takes us from a Crusading Pope in the Borgias era, all the way to Bill Gates' mansion on the shores of Lake Washington.

Michelangelo's frescos of the Sistine Chapel are icons of religious art, drawing visitors from across the world. In 1508, Pope Sixtus IV commissioned the work as a monument to the glorification of God and himself. It was the practice of the rich and powerful (particularly those like Pope Sixtus, having acquired his vast power by warring on Venice) to fund great public works of art, to cement their personal legacy.

The ongoing argument between the Pope and Michelangelo over the long-delayed completion of the work is almost as legendary (http://imdb.com/title/tt0058886/) as the paintings. Fresco painting is a laborious and difficult process. The color is applied to wet plaster, once the color is applied, it cannot be altered, so every brushstroke must be painted perfectly the first time. Michelangelo's work is considered the exemplar; every art student is expected to study these frescos and be familiar with his techniques and methods.

But time will ravage any work of art, and over the years, the Sistine Chapel ceiling leaked, minerals leached through to the surface, and soot from votive candles darkened the paintings. Several restorations were done over the centuries, repainting some damaged areas, and sealing the frescoes with transparent glue. But with as the glue aged, the surface became darker, and the original painting became colorless and lifeless. In the late 1970s, the Vatican decided the ceiling needed a total restoration. You can clearly see how the colors suffered, in this photograph of "The Creation of Adam," the blue sky has darkened and the figures have turned an unattractive color of brown.

 

Modern restoration has a new philosophy: it is more about conservation than restoration. Every brushstroke by the original artist's hand must be preserved. If a damaged section of the fresco must be filled in, it must look natural but be clearly marked as restoration. Previous attempts at restoration must be removed and replaced with modern work conforming to the latest scientific standards. Nothing must ever be done that is irreversible.

So the Vatican consulted the Getty Conservation Institute, who were well experienced in the restoration and conservation of world cultural and archaeological sites. It was decided that the layers of glue over the frescoes would be painstakingly removed by hand, a square inch at a time. However, the plan immediately drew criticism.

Some art curators believed that when the original frescos were completed, Michelangelo was dissatisfied with the bright colors, so he toned them down by painting over some areas with a transparent gray wash of glue and powdered charcoal. But it was impossible to be certain, as the glue sealant layers by previous conservators could not be distinguished from any original layer applied by Michelangelo. The glue could be removed easily, but it was all or nothing.

The Getty institute countered that scholars had been studying the murky, darkened images for so many decades that they had gotten used to them, they believed the frescoes had always been that way, but the new restoration would reveal the work as fresh as if it had just been painted yesterday. Perhaps that fresh work was washed over with glue by Michelangelo the next day, but once the restoration was done, it would be impossible to ever research this issue again. After much debate, the decision was made to proceed and remove all the glue.

Funding the restoration

But the worst problem with this painstaking restoration was the expense. It would cost the Vatican a fortune. They issued a call for public sponsorship, the Japanese TV network NHK stepped forward with a proposal. NHK would pay for the restoration, in return for exclusive film and publication rights. Harper's Magazine writer Eric Scigliano's 2005 report "Inglorious Restorations" asserts that NHK paid between $3 and $4 Million.

The Vatican could only license the copyrights of a public domain work due to an old quirk of copyright law. The original artwork may be in the public domain, but a photograph of that artwork may be copyrighted as a new unique work. The photograph taken today becomes a new copyrighted work with new intellectual property rights. Museums often charge for photographs of works in their collection, and publication royalties provide a modest income stream to fund conservation.

This assignment of copyrights separate from ownership of a work is a long established practice, commonly used by photographers and artists. A photographer might sell limited publication rights to a magazine or book that wishes to print his images, but he retains the copyright for himself so he can resell the image to other publishers. Some artists reverse the process, selling ownership of a painting or sculpture, but retaining reproduction rights and copyrights so he can republish it in catalogs or magazines. Some works are licensed by the estate of the artist, accruing revenue to his heirs.

So the Vatican/NHK deal worked to mutual advantage.


NHK would fund high resolution photographic surveys of the pre- and post-restoration frescos. The ceiling would be hidden behind scaffolding for years, the restoration work could only be seen in photos cautiously released by the Vatican and NHK. When the restored work was finally unveiled, everyone wanted to see the pictures in the new NHK art book. It was a sensation, as promised, each image was as bright and sharp as the day it was painted. NHK won accolades for its patronage, and recouped some of its expenses with the film and book. The Vatican got a free restoration, and the work was preserved for the future.

But there is some legal controversy surrounding this issue. Old artworks may have an owner, but no living author or heirs, and the rights may have expired. If the work is in the public domain, the only guardian is the owner, who has an incentive to exploit those rights for profit. In 1999, a US District Court appears to completely strip away those rights.

In the case of Bridgeman Art Library, LTD. vs Corel Corp. (http://www.law.cornell.edu/copyright/cases/36_FSupp2d_191.htm), Bridgeman sued Corel for infringement. Corel had sold unauthorized CDROMs with Bridgeman's copyrighted images of public domain artworks.

Bridgeman lost the case, and the court set a legal precedent that a photograph of an artwork is not a new work eligible for copyright. Bridgeman had inadvertently destroyed a major market for its products and weakened its central business model. But the US legal precedent does not apply in the UK where both Bridgeman and El Reg operate, so we must pay for the privilege of publishing them.

Some organizations are skirting around this issue. One of my favorite images from the Sistine Chapel ceiling is known as the "Delphic Sibyl." The Sibyl is supposed to be a woman, but Michelangelo prefered young boys as models, so we get a charming figure with an androgynous face and manly arms jutting out from under her blouse and cape. An image of the restored Sibyl is available on Wikipedia (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:DelphicSibylByMichelangelo.jpg), with this disclaimer:

This image (or other media file) is in the public domain because its copyright has expired.

This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.

Faithful reproductions of two-dimensional original works cannot attract copyright in the U.S. according to the rule in Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp. This photograph was taken in the U.S. or in another country where a similar rule applies.

But the disclaimer avoids mentioning UK law; a footnote links to a clarification that accessing this image in the UK could be an infringing action. The Wikipedia image left is unattributed, leaving the international legal status unclear.

The British Museums Copyright Group issued a statement (http://www.museumscopyright.org.uk/bridge.htm) denouncing the Bridgeman v. Corel decision, and advocating the preservation of existing copyright laws concerning reproduction of art objects. Museums and institutions demand control of their IP rights, so it could be difficult to find donors to support restoration and preservation projects if the Intellectual Property rights become worthless.

At this stage, a new and powerful figure enters the picture.


It can be argued that this law about artwork reproductions originated as a courtesy to museums and cultural institutions, and sustains their efforts to preserve our artistic heritage. But there are other agencies that operate solely for profit.

Bill Gates, the world's richest man, founded Corbis (http://pro.corbis.com/), the world's largest source for archival images in 1989. There is a (probably apocryphal) legend about Gates conceiving the idea for Corbis because he wanted fine art to display on the large screen TVs in his new mansion. But legends aside, clearly Gates saw that the image brokering business was ripe for exploitation by someone with deep pockets.

Corbis has recently acquired several major sole-source archives of images, such as The Bettmann Archive (http://www.corbis.com/BettMann100/Archive/BettmannArchive.asp). Corbis offers many contemporary copyrighted photos, but it also provides copyrighted photos of old public domain works for which Corbis is the only source; this can only be considered a monopoly. Corbis has negotiated deals to purchase the exclusive rights to the entire archives of major museums across the world. The museums transfer copyrights of all their works to Corbis, and Corbis makes the images available for purchase, guaranteeing the museums a revenue stream. Corbis has yet to make a profit from these museum collections, but the museums are locked into long term contracts and they like the money.

Ultimately, it should not be surprising that a monopolist like Bill Gates discovered a clause in copyright law that allowed him to acquire a new monopoly. All monopolies ultimately derive from copyrights or patents granted by government. There is essentially no difference between a monopoly on artworks by Corbis, or a monopoly on computer operating systems by Microsoft.

In a video interview on CNN in March 2006, Gates outlined his vision of Corbis as a commercial hub for image transactions, proposing a system of Digital Rights Management for images. You can see the video here (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5T64dgw8n0).

Whatever Gates touches, he makes into an expression of his personal business philosophy. The same provisions of copyright law apply to cultural institutions as well as robber barons, the only difference is how those laws are exploited.

Copyright laws are fine, and work for, not against, the public interest. The ability to exploit the rights to Michelangelo's original work permitted a new masterpiece to emerge. But copyright only works if we can rein in the robber barons. ®

Bootnote

This famous Holbein painting (http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/cgi-bin/WebObjects.dll/CollectionPublisher.woa/wa/largeImage?workNumber=NG1314&collectionPublisherSection=work) was executed in 1533, but the post-restoration photo bears a copyright notice by The National Gallery of London, dated 2002. This painting was restored in 1997, it might have been difficult to get patrons to support an expensive restoration project if the Gallery could not profit from IP licensing of the newly restored artwork. The National Gallery's IP licensing terms are available here (http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/cgi-bin/WebObjects.dll/CollectionPublisher.woa/wa/largeImage?workNumber=NG1314&collectionPublisherSection=work).

Charles Eicher is an artist and multimedia producer in the American Midwest. He has a special interest in intellectual property rights in the Arts and Humanities. He writes at the Disinfotainment (http://weblog.ceicher.com/) weblog.

Related stories

Why Microsoft vs Mankind still matters (21 September 2007)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/21/microsoft_vs_mankind/
Bill Gates's Corbis loses battle for corbis.net (3 April 2007)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/03/corbis_wipo_domain/
How the anti-copyright lobby makes big business richer (29 December 2006)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/12/29/photojournalism_and_copyright/
This Commons Just Isn’t Creative (29 August 2005)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/08/29/creativity_computers_copyright_letters/
On Creativity, Computers and Copyright (21 July 2005)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/07/21/creativity/
Gates lacks golden touch with $5bn investment portfolio (18 January 2000)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2000/01/18/gates_lacks_golden_touch/

© Copyright 2008

How to copyright Michelangelo [printer-friendly] | The Register

Grand Text Auto » Digital Media, Games, and Open Access

Grand Text Auto » Digital Media, Games, and Open Access

 

"I blogged this earlier but the discussion in the comments warrents mentioning it again..Check them out....." HSM

Digital Media, Games, and Open Access

by nick @ 7:19 am

With regard to your request, I cannot agree to review for your journal right now. If [it] becomes an open access journal, I will be very glad to review articles for the journal.

Having written this in an email recently, I wanted to post about my reasoning and ask what Grand Text Auto readers, commenters, and bloggers think about this issue. Open access journals and other scholarly publishing issues are classic ivory tower matters, but my concern about restricting access to Grand-Text-Auto-like subjects has a lot to do with my concern for non-academic readers and commenters here, as well as academics who aren’t at major research universities with full access to journals. This includes people at small liberal arts colleges, even if they write award-winning papers, and independent scholars, even if they regularly keynote conferences and contribute authored and edited volumes to the academic discourse. It also includes game-makers, electronic literature authors, creators of digital art, and those who arrive here curious about digital media. Not to mention one of our six drivers.

Grand Text Auto » Digital Media, Games, and Open Access

The Access Principle - The MIT Press

The Access Principle - The MIT Press 

The Access Principle
The Case for Open Access to Research and Scholarship
John Willinsky
Table of Contents and Sample Chapters
Download the full text of this book (quick and free registration required)
Questions about access to scholarship go back farther than recent debates over subscription prices, rights, and electronic archives suggest. The great libraries of the past -- from the fabled collection at Alexandria to the early public libraries of nineteenth-century America -- stood as arguments for increasing access. In The Access Principle, John Willinsky describes the latest chapter in this ongoing story -- online open access publishing by scholarly journals -- and makes a case for open access as a public good.
A commitment to scholarly work, writes Willinsky, carries with it a responsibility to circulate that work as widely as possible: this is the access principle. In the digital age, that responsibility includes exploring new publishing technologies and economic models to improve access to scholarly work. Wide circulation adds value to published work; it is a significant aspect of its claim to be knowledge. The right to know and the right to be known are inextricably mixed. Open access, argues Willinsky, can benefit both a researcher-author working at the best-equipped lab at a leading research university and a teacher struggling to find resources in an impoverished high school.
Willinsky describes different types of access -- the New England Journal of Medicine, for example, grants open access to issues six months after initial publication, and First Monday forgoes a print edition and makes its contents immediately accessible at no cost. He discusses the contradictions of copyright law, the reading of research, and the economic viability of open access. He also considers broader themes of public access to knowledge, human rights issues, lessons from publishing history, and "epistemological vanities." The debate over open access, writes Willinsky, raises crucial questions about the place of scholarly work in a larger world -- and about the future of knowledge.
About the Author
John Willinsky is Pacific Press Professor of Literacy and Technology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Empire of Words: The Reign of the OED and a developer of Open Journals Systems software.

Reviews

"The subtitle of this book is somewhat misleading, as 'The Case for Open Access' takes up only a portion of the book. Histories of the scientific journal and the public library movement, while informative, don't add much to his central argument, and his criticism of the Bush administration's claims to a scientific basis for the No Child Left Behind Act is merely a tangent. Still, his book is thoughtful, informed, and thought-provoking, and his account of the role of the Internet and an incipient open-access movement is genuine news."
-- New York Sun

"A well-researched and scholarly account of the issues surrounding the publication of research. The book is both balanced and fair in its discussion of the various models and responses to concerns about the accessibility of publicly funded research."
-- Science

Endorsements

"John Willinsky understands the way the Internet changes everything for scholarly communication and has written a clear and compelling defense of open access, both in principle and in practice. I recommend it especially for its treatment of copyright issues and the special situation of scholarly societies and developing countries."
--Peter Suber, Open Access Project Director at Public Knowledge and Research Professor of Philosophy at Earlham College

"John Willinsky is among the academic pioneers in the use of open access technology for research and scholarship. This book will prove invaluable for faculty, students, and independent scholars who wish to liberate themselves from the grip of the big corporate Internet colossus. Willinsky writes in a clear and convincing style, and his suggestions are right on target."
--Stanley Aronowitz, Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Graduate Center, City University of New York

Awards

Winner of the 2006 Distinguished Book Award sponsored by the international journal Computers and Composition

Received the 2006 Blackwell Scholarship Award presented by the American Library Association (ALA)

The Access Principle - The MIT Press

New journal to target education in evolution

New journal to target education in evolution 

New journal to target education in evolution

By John Timmer | Published: December 26, 2007 - 09:25AM CT

Evolutionary principles impact our understanding of everything from cancer, through drug and pesticide resistance, to managing the environment to maintain biodiversity. But the US public understands evolution poorly, and the mere presence of the topic in public science education has sparked controversy. A new journal, Evolution: Education and Outreach, has been established with the intention of improving education in the topic by getting scientists and teachers to discuss issues and lesson plans related to evolution. The journal has just released its first issue, and all the content has been made Open Access.

The brains behind Evolution: Education and Outreach are the Eldridge brothers. Two are high school students, and the third, Niles, happens to have been one of two people who produced the concept of punctuated equilibria; he's on the staff of the American Museum of Natural History.

The journal is meant to contain a mixture of lesson plans, scientific content, and personal reflections. It's an interesting concept, but some of the content seemed haphazard in this first issue. We don't normally expect articles in a scientific journal to form a coherent picture, but this one doesn't target the same audience. A better-implemented editorial vision might make future editions more than the sum of their individual parts.

Those individual parts seem hit or miss. I don't teach on the high school level, but the lesson plan on the kingdoms of life seems rather sparse and assumes a lot of preexisting knowledge in its target audience. Reports on the attempts to insert creationism in the science classrooms of England and the failure to call evolution by its name in the scientific literature have been covered well elsewhere. A personal perspective on the attitudes towards evolution of her peers could have used some further editing, but still painted an informative picture of how students come out of high school with a poor understanding of the topic, and typically avoid ever studying biology again.

Two articles, however, really stood out as excellent; both were on the philosophy of science. Ian Tattersall mixes personal experience in paleoanthropology with thoughts on Popper and Kuhn; I don't entirely agree with those thoughts, but they do a wonderful job of linking the abstract philosophy to the actual practice of science and thoughts of scientists.

But T. Ryan Gregory steals the show with an essay entitled "Evolution as Fact, Theory, and Path" (and I'm not just saying that because he's said nice things about me at his blog, Genomicron). Working from the definitions of the National Academies of Science, he shows how the common understanding of terms like "law" and "theory" cause confusion about the place of evolution in the sciences, and how the observable fact of evolution is just one small part of the theory.

Overall, there's some good material here, but some of it almost feels like it's written for nonoverlapping audiences. In the longer term, I think a more careful coordination of lesson plans with the material from scientists would make for a more compelling package. Hopefully, even in its current form, the material will be useful for educators.

New journal to target education in evolution