[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: American Society for Microbiology
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: American Society for Microbiology
- From: David Goodman <dgoodman@princeton.edu>
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1998 13:46:36 EST
- Reply-To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I have also been in communication with them also. As I have confirmed in extensive correspondence with their Director, Journals, Linda Illig <Illig@asmusa.org>, the license does not even include access in all of a single building, except for the actual library. This is not an oversight or awkward wording, but intentional. For the complete license, see: http://www.journals.asm.org/subscriptions/sitelicense.shtml Since, as I and the faculty here see it, the key benefit of electronic journals is their greater availability, we are also not paying the 30% premium they are charging, though we certainly would pay it for at least some of their journals if they provided the usual campus-wide access. The faculty here, including the editor in chief of one of their journals, are also involved in correspondence with them. I have not seen a definition as restrictive as this elsewhere. All other scholarly scientific organizations have more liberal terms for institutional subscribers (I summarize, and am not specifying details) : AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY has the electronic versions for a surcharge, unlimited campus-uide use and dial in access from off campus. AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus AMERICAN PHYSIOLOGICAL SOCIETY has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR CELL BIOLOGY has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus AMERICAN SOCIETY OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY has the electronic versions for a surcharge, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTING MACHINERY has the electronic versions in a package with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA has the electronic versions in a package with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. SOCIETY FOR INDUSTRIAL AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS has the electronic versions free with print, unlimited campus-wide use and dial in access from off campus. The ASM's reply to this list is that >All societies are not the same. David Goodman Biology Librarian, Princeton University Library dgoodman@princeton.edu http://www.princeton.edu/~biolib/ phone: 609-258-3235 fax: 609-258-2627 _________________ David S. Crawford wrote: > > Do other libraries find the proposed American Society for Microbiology > licence rather strange? > > The ASM restricts the licence to a BUILDING, charging extra fees for extra > buildings. At McGill we have a general policy of offering all > library-purchased e-titles to all users and the costs of covering all our > buildings would be far too high. McGill's IP addresses are not strictly > linked to a building, so even if we wanted to do this we would find it > difficult. > > Due to the ASM rules McGill will not be subscribing to their, very useful, > e-journals and Faculty members here who are ASM members are lobbying their > Executive. > > Any comments or other ideas? > > David S. Crawford > Health Sciences Librarian > McGill University > Montreal, CANADA
- Prev by Date: MCB journals available through OCLC's ECO
- Next by Date: RE: American Society for Microbiology
- Prev by thread: Re: American Society for Microbiology
- Next by thread: RE: American Society for Microbiology
- Index(es):