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Re: Fair use / fair dealing - a fantasy?
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Fair use / fair dealing - a fantasy?
- From: "atanu garai" <atanugarai.lists@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 6 Jun 2007 08:33:47 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Heather Morrison wrote: > Sandy Thatcher wrote: Most journal contracts I am familiar > with specify the transfer of "all rights." Such a transfer > means what it says, quite literally, and it is entirely > unnecessary therefore to include any specific > waiver of fair use rights. The very act of transferring all > rights effectively accomplishes that, and nothing more needs to > be added. This debate is becoming too hypothetical, without corroboration from practical instances from the journals. The concept of 'fair use', especially in the context of journal publishing is very apparent and straightforward, virtually across all the copyright acts in most of the countries. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology published a good number of respected and highly-cited journals in this domain. The Society states that: Quote: ASBMB does not charge for and grants use without requiring your copyright permission request for: * The Journal of Biological Chemistry is copyrighted by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. ASBMB grants use without requiring your copyright permission request for: Original authors wanting to reproduce figures or tables from their own work to publish in not-for-profit formats or venues, provided that full acknowledgment of the source is provided in the new work. * Students wanting to reproduce or republish their work for educational purposes. * Students using other authors' material for their theses. * Reproduction or republication of abstracts only. * Photocopying up to 5 copies for personal use. * Non-profit educational institutions making multiple photocopies of articles for classroom use; all such reproduction must utilize institutionally owned equipment for this purpose. Unquote (http://www.jbc.org/misc/Copyright_Permission.shtml) So, the scope for 'fair use' by author or a reader is quite understandable from the publishers' point of view. Presumably, authors did not have major objection to this policy and practice taken by the publishers until now. It is difficult to tell with the availability of OA options, authors would want or demand a larger scope of 'fair access' that allows them to exercise 'fair use'. In my personal experience, authors will not be indulged in activities like pressing 'fair use button' for the practical reason of their lack of time. Often the OA advocates have dealt with the broader goals of broadening the horizons of access through developing various technologies, but without much realisation of the practical aspects or implications of such technology uses. In last few years, I have made many requests over email to individual authors to send their published articles for my own academic works. If the work is already available on the web, they would almost immediately send the link (and perhaps the article itself as an attachment) but if such articles are available through commercial publishers, they would tell to contact the commercial publisher concerned. We can also debate the hypothesis that since authors intend to increase access to their research through open access, hence they will engage themselves in self-archiving, using fair use button and so on. They will not. Author's motivation for spreading their research output does not necessarily translate into their engagement in open access. In thousands years of publishing history, authors have never dealt with the issue of access. They have confined themselves in doing research, writing the research and transfer the note to other people. The greatest impetus for author's motivation for spreading their research need not come from the availability of open access, but from improving their scholarly output so that the research papers become qualified for publication in quality journals. -- Atanu Garai Online Networking Specialist Globethics.net [Disclaimer: The views expressed here are solely that of author. Globethics.net does not subscribe to, endorse or reflect the opinions and views expressed here.]
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