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Re: Licensing books
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Licensing books
- From: "adam hodgkin" <adam.hodgkin@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2006 19:09:32 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
At the risk of sounding too much like the testy examiner of this assignment, I would suggest that this question is too unconstrained to be useful. Similar in WHAT respects? Do we mean similar from the point of view of licensing for sites or single users? Or similar as regards delivery platform? Annual pricing? Big deals? Is the presupposition that scholarly books will be treated very differently from eg Trade books, or Children's books? If so, is that a safe presupposition? etc I suspect that Joe intended to target the question in a specific direction, but it needs it. More direction and more context please. I will risk one thought for your consideration: the journal move to the web began roughly 10 years ago. Looks as though the book move is begining roughly now. The web is very different now from what it was then. In the context of pervasive broadband and Web 2.0, a big database approach such as Google Book Search, seems a lot more appropriate than the 'delivered file' approach used by PDF-type content packages for specific scientific papers. The challenge now for publishers and authors is much more on how to design optimal e-libraries, ten years ago it looked like the challenge was how to make e-books work. That was a blind alley. Adam Hodgkin On 2/24/06, Joseph J. Esposito <espositoj@gmail.com> wrote: > > I was in an interesting discussion this morning in which the > question came up as to whether scholarly books would follow a > digital path similar to what journals experienced beginning, > say, 10 years ago. At the risk of this sounding a bit like a > "compare and contrast" assignment that is the bane of high > schoolers, I was wondering if other members of this list had > pondered this analogy. Will books follow journals, albeit > several steps behind, or will they forge their own way in the > brave new digital world? > > Joe Esposito
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