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Re: Scanning licenses
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Scanning licenses
- From: Curtis Lavery <laveryc@sbcglobal.net>
- Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 19:31:45 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Hi Julie, The California Digital Library has been scanning licenses for more than 2 years. Our purpose was twofold: to provide a document for those who need to view and understand its contents; and to digitize a fully executed document for archiving in a secure, remote location. We also maintain a locked archive of original print licenses for internal reference needs and auditors. In addition to a scanned version of the full document, we also redact the license for personal and cost information and scan it for reference by campus users. We have not normally ocr'ed any of these documents. At present we maintain a relational database that gives us some information upon inquiry about license terms and contacts. Over the course of the next year we hope to have initiated our ERM, which will replace and enhance our home-grown file. Since license provisions are narrative and typically need interpretation, I feel that indexing beyond what we can obtain from acrobat doesn't merit our effort. Our biggest problem when we began was locating license originals for scanning and filing in a locked archive. Different categories of documents had been stored in different locations. We used a simple excel file to note and track the status of each expected license. We also scan and archive our other contractual documents, breach allegation documentation, and requests we receive for public records. If you have any specific questions, please contact me at curtis.lavery@ucop.edu. With best wishes, Curtis Lavery California Digital Library _______________________________ Julie Blake <jblake11@jhuadig.admin.jhu.edu> wrote: (Apologies for duplication). We're interested in scanning licenses so they're available for various constituencies and searchable (OCR?) as well. We do not yet have an ERM, but would like to get started anyway. We know there have got to be others that are way ahead of us in this game, so I'm throwing myself upon your tender mercies. Who's doing this? How? Thoughts, ideas, warnings? Anyone have an open source solution for organizing or scanning? Thanks, Julie C. Blake Serials & Electronic Resources Acquisitions Coordinator Sheridan Libraries, Johns Hopkins University julie.blake@jhu.edu
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