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Publishers #1 short term problem
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Publishers #1 short term problem
- From: "Colin Steele" <Colin.Steele@anu.edu.au>
- Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2010 18:20:50 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Re the recent emails by Sandy Thatcher and Alex Holzman, we are clearly in a period of historical transition as also reflected in my chapter 'E-books and scholarly communication futures' in Woodward and Estelle's 'Digital Information' (London, Facet, 2010). Preprint at (https://dspace-sub.anu.edu.au:8443/jspui/handle/10440/1024) The chapter concludes "Who will own, however, what we read and at what price, particularly in the academic world? When I worked in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, new readers had to read an introductory statement which includes the words: 'I hereby undertake not to...kindle therein any fire'. Back to Fahrenheit 451? The Amazon Kindle reader and Google Book Search both bring many advantages in terms of access to a variety of text and form, but we need at the same time to continue kindling the flames of public access to knowledge to ensure the digital era provides as many opportunities for the freedom of expression as possible. The challenge for twenty-first century scholarship, which includes e- books, is to implement an infrastructure for the digital world untrammelled by the historical legacies in the frameworks and costings of print culture. In academic monograph and textbook production, digital online access will become the norm, more often than not supplemented by data and multimedia additions. Print ,however, will not die, given the likely explosion of cheap POD outlets. Readers will still be able to judge a book by its POD cover. E-book futures are still clearly evolving and cost and ease of access will be crucial issues. A discernible trend is, however, emerging with open access e-book environments. If e-outputs and their impacts become embedded in promotion and tenure and research assessment exercises, then more institutions will assume responsibility for harvesting and providing global access to their scholarship, scholarship that combines authority with public accessibility. A suitable vision for the twenty first century? 'Let those who are not old, - who are still young, ponder this well' (Trollope, 1866)" While texts will be born digital, many will be available through increasingly ubiquitous and cheaper POD machines. It is Rrelevant in this context that Melbourne University launched on April 8, its Custom Book Centre, an initiative of the the Bookshop and the University Library. (http://www.bookshop.unimelb.edu.au/cbc/p?X.7) Richard Charkin, the CEO of Bloomsbury (which includes Bloomsbury Academic publishing) was recently in Australia and some of his comments on e-books, copyright and distribution practices are relevant to this thread. See http://www.canberratimes.com.au/news/local/news/entertainment/good-books -will-always-succeed/1782622.aspx Issues in relation to siloed, territorial copyright are relevant. Just as the former territorial divisions of the DVD market are now rendered redundant by global DVD players, it makes no sense to limit global access to text based on historical territorial print copyright agreements. As Charkin says, many of Bloomsbury's e-book sales were to "rural and remote areas, from Bolivia to Timbuktu". Colin Steele Emeritus Fellow Division of Information The Australian National University
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