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ILL & Licensing questions
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: ILL & Licensing questions
- From: Janet Croft <jbcroft@ou.edu>
- Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 16:43:46 EST
- Reply-To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I'm new to this list and to the problem of license compliance, having recently moved from a very small institution, where we didn't even try to loan anything electronic, to a much larger institution, where I'm facing the problems of license compliance in interlibrary loan. I'm researching the topic and would like to put three questions to this group, if I may. 1. How do you handle compliance issues in interlibrary lending, when you have so many databases and individual subscriptions to deal with, all with slightly different licensing terms? Do you keep a list of all the databases and journals next to the lending terminal? Do you add a note to the cataloging record to indicate if lending is permitted? Do you do something more automated? Or are your people who sign licenses just very good about not signing anything that doesn't allow ILL? 2. How much trouble do you have renegotiating the terms of a licensing agreement if the original doesn't allow ILL? I know of two cases where we were able to negotiate permission. 3. Is anyone using model licenses with any success? I appreciate your help. It's been a real eye-opener, looking over all our licensing agreements and seeing such a lack of uniformity of terms and restrictions! Obviously model licenses are needed. Janet Brennan Croft Head of Access Services University of Oklahoma Bizzell Library NW106 Norman OK 73069 405-325-1918 fax 405-325-7618 jbcroft@ou.edu ------------------------ There are two kinds of people in this world: those who need closure
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