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Re: BioMed Central Authors to retain copyright
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: BioMed Central Authors to retain copyright
- From: "Trisha L. Davis" <davis.115@osu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 22:06:01 EDT
- Reply-To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Rick - Your comments are so true. Why don't folks understand the basics of copyright law? Would they want their research free to all without barriers? What BioMed can do is to obtain copyright permission for the research "as published" by them (BioMed) while the author retains all rights to the intellectual property. Then BioMed can transfer those rights to whomever they wish, for whatever purposes and at whatever cost, or free. Maybe this is what they're trying to say? ************************************************************************** Trisha L. Davis, Associate Professor Head, Serials & Electronic Resources Dept The Ohio State University Libraries Phone: (614) 292-6314 1848 Neil Avenue Mall 040N Fax: (614) 292-2015 Columbus, OH 43210-1286 Email: davis.115@osu.edu ************************************************************************** At 06:32 PM 4/12/00 -0400, you wrote: ><snip> > > "BioMed Central promises to offer all primary research > > without financial and copyright barriers," says Professor > > Marc W Kirschner, Head of the Department of Cell Biology at > > Harvard Medical School. > ><snip> > > "We will make the publishing of original research quicker, > > easier and free to all," says Vitek Tracz, Chairman of > > BioMed Central. > >Ummmm... well, let's not exaggerate here. If the copyright remains with >the authors, it's not exactly accurate to say that there are "no copyright >barriers" involved or that the authors' research will now be "free to >all." In fact, unless the authors formally put their works in the public >domain, the full force of copyright law will still apply -- it's just that >it will do so on behalf of the authors, rather than the publisher. This >is probably a good thing in that it keeps copyright in the hands of those >who are presumably driven more by professional (rather than economic) >interests, but it does not mean that their work has somehow become "free >to all"; users face the same restrictions under the law no matter who owns >the copyright. > > >-------- >Rick Anderson >Head Acquisitions Librarian >Jackson Library >UNC Greensboro >(336) 334-5281 >rick_anderson@uncg.edu
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