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Re: ejournals and ILL



When it comes to ILL, it is important to keep that in mind that ILL in the US is governed by the CONTU limitations intended to ensure that ILL is never used to take the place of a subscription. Regardless of whether an article is printed to paper and scanned into ARIEL or whether a patron can make a request directly in his or her library's ILL system, when the requesting library passes the number of permitted loans in a year, it has to start paying permission fees. Inefficiency and what Joseph Esposito called the "Universal Customer Problem" may be an issue for general document delivery, but not for ILL. The one exception might be for ILLs sent overseas, since the requesting country would not have to follow the CONTU "rule of five." But even there, I don't think there is much of a problem. A German library, for example, requesting an ILL from an American institution would as I understand it have to pay permission fees under the new German copyright law. Furthermore, few American libraries are interested in engaging in ILL transactions with foreign institutions since the exchange is usually not reciprocal. And lastly, under standard ILL procedures, the requesting library must assert that the use is either authorized under CONTU or is a fair use. For this reason, license terms that require that articles be printed and then scanned in order to be used in ILL are just plain mean. Peter B. Hirtle CUL Intellectual Property Officer and Technology Strategist Cornell University Library Ithaca, NY peter.hirtle@cornell.edu