Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 Mobile Platforms, Linked Content, and Copyright: Issues and Answers COPE North American Seminar 2014 Philadelphia, PA August 13, 2014 Michael W. Carroll.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 Mobile Platforms, Linked Content, and Copyright: Issues and Answers COPE North American Seminar 2014 Philadelphia, PA August 13, 2014 Michael W. Carroll."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Mobile Platforms, Linked Content, and Copyright: Issues and Answers COPE North American Seminar 2014 Philadelphia, PA August 13, 2014 Michael W. Carroll Professor of Law American University Washington College of Law

2 2 Information Environmentalism

3 3

4 4 Scholarly Communication

5 5  Reaching these readers is good for authors Open access increases citations http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html Scholarly Communication

6 6  Reaching these readers is good for authors Open access increases citations http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html Scholarly Communication

7 7  Reaching these readers is good for authors Open access increases citations http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html Scholarly Communication

8 8

9 9

10 10 Scholarly Communication

11 11 Scholarly Communication

12 12 Scholarly Communication

13 13 Looking forward: 1. What is the role of the “paper” in digital environment? - reporting data – why not just publish the data? -materials and methods? (is this just metadata?) Scholarly Communication

14 14 Looking forward: 2. The “paper” is a networked object. - format it like one - make the links to inputs and outputs express - including links to non-digital objects (naming challenge) Scholarly Communication

15 15 Looking forward: 3. Networked objects have relationships - Possible for publishers to make these visible upon publication? -e.g., What line(s) of research is this result connected to? -part of a family or portfolio of papers? Scholarly Communication

16 16 Looking forward: 4. Digital technology and stability of the record - the digitally networked object can grow, change, be deleted -how to preserve timeline? -how to prevent link rot? Scholarly Communication

17 The Role of Copyright

18  Three dimensions of copyright Subject matter (the nouns - what can by copyrighted) Scope (the verbs - what rights come with a copyright) Duration (when the rights expire).

19 19  Nouns  Which aspects of linked content does copyright apply to?  E.g., Does copyright apply to data elements, datasets, figures, tables, charts, etc.?  A: It depends. Facts v. Expression

20 20  Copyright only attaches to “works of authorship” – this is the author’s original expression of ideas, facts, etc.  Facts and ideas are free to copy. Data 20

21 Copyright Ideas (public domain) Expression (work of authorship) Facts (public domain) 21

22 22 Copyright in datasets Ideas (research hypothesis) Expression (original selection, arrangement or visualization) Facts (numeric or other representations of measurements) 04/08/2014Carroll – Meaning of “Open” 22

23 23  Many datasets, databases, figures, charts, tables, etc. likely have a copyrighted layer and a public domain (factual) layer.  Raw sensor data or data organized according to a general standard likely has no copyright constraints. Data 23

24 24  Copyright attaches to expression that reflects some creative or editorial choice about how to express facts or ideas.  E.g., selection and arrangement of data (e.g., field names, hierarchies, visualizations) Data 24

25 Copyright VVerbs – i.e., Scope of Rights CCopyright law gives Author the power to control: Making of copies Distributing copies Public performances Public displays Communication to the public Adaptations of copyrighted work

26 Linking Scope of Rights Linking generally is not covered by copyright - Definitely not in the US, except when one knowingly links to infringing content - In the EU, as long as the link is to already-available content, then it is not a new “communication to the public” of the copyrighted work

27 Copyright Scope of Rights Author’s rights are subject to limitations and exceptions, e.g. - Fair use (US, S. Korea, Israel, Philippines) - Fair dealing (UK, Canada, Australia...) - Itemized list, private study, research … (rest of the world) - First sale

28 Text and Data Mining  Copyright’s application to text and data mining varies by country.  If mining is for the public domain layer of information – facts, concordances, associations, etc.  Then copyright does not restrict mining in the US.  It is debatable whether copyright restricts mining in places with private study or research exceptions and limitations.

29 Text and Data Mining  However, in most countries a researcher (or her library) can forfeit the freedom to mine as part of a contract.

30 30  Reaching these readers is good for authors Open access increases citations http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html Scholarly Communication

31 31  Copyright Basics – Ownership and Licensing Copyright is transferable To transfer some or all of the exclusive rights, author(s) must do so in writing and sign it. NB – The author(s) who transfer(s) must be an author for copyright purposes – i.e. the one(s) who did the writing. Scholarly Communication

32 32

33 33  Copyright Basics Permissions (non-exclusive licenses) Copyright owner can give permission or non-exclusive license very informally. Verbal permission or even implied from conduct. Scholarly Communication

34 34  Copyright Basics Copyright is transferable Subscription-based journals require the authors to transfer some or all rights in an article However, the author can transfer only those rights that have not been licensed already Scholarly Communication

35 35

36 36 Scholarly Communication Photo by: Mike Licht at http://www.flickr.com/photos/notionscapital/

37 37 The Open Access movement seeks to realign the free speech values that underlie academic freedom and the pursuit of knowledge... With the economics of Internet publication Open Access

38 38  Five Audiences that Open Access serves  Serendipitous readers  Under-resourced readers  Interdisciplinary readers  International readers  Machine readers Scholarly Communication

39 39  Creative Commons licenses are permissions granted to the public with some conditions  Six CC licenses combine different sets of conditions  “CC BY” is shorthand for the Creative Commons Attribution license.  The only condition on reuse is that the source is properly credited. Gold Open Access and Creative Commons

40 Step 1: Choose Conditions Attribution ShareAlike NonCommercial NoDerivatives

41 Step 2: Receive a License

42 CC0 public domain dedication Public Domain Mark

43 most free least free

44 3 layers

45 “human readable” deed

46 “lawyer readable” license

47

48 48 Faculty Copyrights  Discussion?


Download ppt "1 Mobile Platforms, Linked Content, and Copyright: Issues and Answers COPE North American Seminar 2014 Philadelphia, PA August 13, 2014 Michael W. Carroll."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google