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Re: Ejournals and ILL
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Ejournals and ILL
- From: "Tracy L. Thompson" <tracy.thompson@yale.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2008 22:58:35 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Hi, NELLCO's standard license agreement includes electronic ILL. I've copied the relevant text below. Feel free to use it in your own license agreements or negotiations. >Interlibrary Loan. Licensee may fulfill occasional requests >from other institutions (by mail, fax or electronic >transmissions), a practice commonly called Interlibrary Loan. >Licensee agrees to fulfill such requests in compliance with >Section 108 of the United States Copyright Law (17 USC- 108, >Limitations on exclusive rights: Reproduction by libraries and >archives) and the Guidelines for the Proviso of Subsection >108(2g)(2) prepared by the National Commission on New >Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works. Cheers, Tracy Thompson NELLCO New England Law Library Consortium At 07:31 PM 2/26/2008, you wrote: >Hi Beth, > >We have only one license that permits us to send the electronic >copy of the article from the database. Since other agreements >specify that we may use a print copy for interlibrary loan >purposes, we print a copy of the pdf from the database, then scan >and send the document through Ariel, as is our usual practice. > >Sue Nelson >Instructional Services Librarian >Snowden Library >Lycoming College >Williamsport, PA 17701 >(570) 321-4352 >nelson@lycoming.edu > > >>>> "Beth Jacoby" <bjacoby@ycp.edu> 2/25/2008 6:48 PM >>> > >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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