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RE: Fair use (RE: electronic journals CCC)
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: RE: Fair use (RE: electronic journals CCC)
- From: Tom Williams <twilliam@bbl.usouthal.edu>
- Date: Mon, 7 May 2001 18:32:02 EDT
- Reply-To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
-- On Fri, 4 May 2001, Rick Anderson wrote: > It's not a question of permitting or not permitting ILL -- I don't agree > that licenses should forbid ILL entirely. My argument is that publishers > are justified in restricting ILL to paper printouts of online articles, > because electronic distribution is so easy. This is just common sense: if > you mail me a photocopy, I can read it myself and maybe pass it around to > my colleagues. If you e-mail me an article, I can literally distribute it > to several thousand people within seconds. Tom: This argument really doesn't hold water in my view. If a user is going to cheat the copyright laws, it makes little difference to them, other than saving a few minutes, to make an E copy or a print copy. With paper, all the abuser has to do is stick the article in his/her hotsy totsy, bells-and-whistles copy machine and run off as many copies as desired within a very short time. All libraries that I know of or have worked in ALWAYS adhere to copyright laws as they understand them to be. > > Surely the wording of the license clause could be tailored to allow > > ILL the way libraries have always done, without encouraging the kind > > of "systematic" distribution you are talking about. > > If what you mean by "the way libraries have always done" is "in physical > formats," then that sort of wording is what I find reasonable. I also > think it's great when publishers allow ILL via electronic means. But I > understand when they don't. > > > When it comes to restriction of access and authentication technology, > > don't publishers/aggregators (at least in academic libraries) actually > > have more control over who reads their material than when it was simply > > available in print to anyone who walked into the library? > > Absolutely not. They may have control over who gets to their content > initially, but unless a contract governs what the user can do with the > content afterwards, they have no control whatsoever over what happens > after that. Tom: Still, even with a print copy, a cheater could scan a copy into the PC and send as many email copies as desired. Or just send multiple copies of the print. The publishers, in reality, have little additional risk. > I'm saying that it's silly to expect publishers to regard fair use > limitations as serious copyright protection in the electronic realm, and > that they're justified in some of the restrictions (in particular, those > on electronic redistribution) that they put in their licenses. Tom: This, then, is the crux of the current dialogue between librarians themselves, plus librarians and publishers. My guess is that this will all be decided eventually by the powers-that-be, most likely the courts. Tom
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