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Ejournals and ILL
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Ejournals and ILL
- From: "Beth Jacoby" <bjacoby@ycp.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2008 18:48:27 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I'd like to hear how other libraries are handling interlibrary loan transactions for online journal articles when the license agreement forbids electronic transmission of the article. We recently signed two separate license agreements which, according to my interpretation, do not allow us to fulfill ILL requests unless we print out the article and send it via snail mail. Wording of the license from the first publisher: "The Subscriber may print and deliver Excerpts to fulfill requests as part of the practice commonly known as 'interlibrary loan' from non-commercial libraries located within the same country as the Subscriber." Wording of the license from the second publisher: "The subscribing Institution's library facilities are permitted to use printouts from the electronic versions of the Journals, but not manipulable electronic files, for the purpose of inter-library loan, subject to the limitations of Section 108 of the Copyright Act of 1976 and the CONTU Guidelines related thereto." If we get an ILL request for an article we have only in print, our current practice is to scan the article and send it to the requesting library as a PDF document. As I interpret these licenses, we may neither send the article from the e-version nor scan the print and send it as a PDF for ILL purposes. 1. How do you interpret these clauses? 2. Would you consider a PDF file as "manipulable"? 3. Have you had any success in negotiating more liberal ILL clauses? Beth Jacoby Collection Development Librarian Schmidt Library York College of Pennsylvania York, PA 17405-7199 Email: bjacoby@ycp.edu
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