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Respone to: Librarians and their institutional attorneys
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Respone to: Librarians and their institutional attorneys
- From: Lorraine Busby <lbusby@uwo.ca>
- Date: Sun, 26 Feb 2006 14:37:07 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Hello Ann,
You ask an interesting question as I am on a first name basis with General Counsel!
Originally I came to know him because of the divine inc. (in Canada)/RoweCom collapse. We were tipped off to irregularities prior to any information hitting the listservs. I was working in the background with a number of institutional people in what turned out to be fruitless efforts to get our money back or orders in place. Immediately after ceasing business, the lawyer went with me to the OLA (Ontario Library Association) Conference and spoke at a special session.
From there I consulted him a couple of months ago because acompany we do not do use for our serial orders canceled over 1,300 of our journal subscriptions. The serial orders are legitimate ones that have been placed with the two serial vendors that have our business. Unfortunately the publishers did not understand this and many of them canceled legitimate orders. The "guilty" company kept insisting they did nothing wrong. The problem appears to be a computer glitch and my institution appears to be the only library affected by this glitch. Nonetheless we have significant work and disruption (and continue to have lingering problems). And the company that originated the cancellations keeps insisting on innocence despite being copied on the cancellation forms that have their company name and logo. Our lawyer was planning on writing to express concerns but due to other issues this did not happen.
I also consulted the same lawyer on public performance rights and a potential site license for the campus. Colleagues are currently consulting him on copyright issues. I know that he is involved with colleagues on intellectual property issues but I don't know the specifics. And last, but not least, he is providing me with a one page summary of "When to Call a Lawyer" for the graduate level library science course I am teaching on Managing Vendor Relations.
I would be interested in other responses as well.
Lorraine Busby
Associate University Librarian, Information Resources
University of Western Ontario
London, Ontario N6A 3K7
Canada
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