E-Reserves - rough notes
Electronic Reserve
Lois Wasoff
Outside Intellectual Property Counsel
Houghton Mifflin
1:15 pm May 19, 2004
E-reserves
As commonly used – digitized course readings available usually on a library network or a department network with restricted access to students enrolled in a class. This is the digital successor to the traditional paper reserves [e.g. coursepaks].
Issues
- Substitute for traditional course pack
- Academic has developed own definition (broad use) of fair use for e-reserves
- Publishers must develop own positions and if necessary defend in legal proceedings
- 1994 – Assoc. of Res. Libraries and NACS – forum – presentations of early e-reserves systems.
- Was skepticism of practical application of this technology
- Was necessary to have expensive scanning equipment, storage, broadband, etc – mostly out of reach of typical libraries
- Today -those barriers have disappeared
- Question of how these reserves affect or affected by fair use,(CONFU) part of IP group of Clinton’s Information Infrastructure Task Force
- Working Group on E-reserve uses did not succeed in creating guidelines that were generally acceptable [see URL for guidelines in handout]
- Some academic and Libraries accepted – publishers and ARL did not
- But, these have served as de facto standard so they are still relevant
- Problems from publishers perspective
- Too generous length allowances
- No provisions for affective protections
- Ah, a number of probs
- Guidelines said amount of material for a course should be “a small portion of total proposed readings for a course”
- There was a concern that e-reserves would become an effective substitute for traditional course material (and gets around the course pak solution)
- E-reserve systems continue to grow dramatically
- 1999 – (no study since then)
- A year ago – preliminary review of college web sites by AAP –
- Vast majority offer e-reserve systems
- Very few have detailed guidelines
- Remember, using something in e-reserves generally means you are
- Scanning it
- Posting it
- Allowing for further copying
- Most guidelines just used the term fair use without defining what fair use meant
- Where password protections exist – their use may not be known to copyright owners at all [so they don’t have to register their work but the users have to advertise protective measures taken?]
- One example saw material placed on reserve for 90 courses with average amount of 300 pages (max 1800 pages on reserve)
- Average from single work was 33 pages
- Some of these materials are used repeatedly
- What does Academic community say about Fair Use?
- ARL has own statement/framework
- [check printed materials for link]
- Acknowledges e-resources being used – but suggests checking licenses to make sure they are broad enough to use in e-reserve systems (ARL’s suggestion is made to ensure the libraries don’t pay for material they already have license to use)
- Character of use
- ARL framework – in support of non-profit education
- Factors such as relevance to teaching objective – may make use of entire work appropriate
- Market factor
- Many e-reserve use have supplementary material, e-reserve use is appropriate
- ARL reminds 504(c ) protection is available
- For those reasons the academic community thinks e-reserves are appropriate fair use
- Coursepak decision say copying of journal articles, etc clearly say this is inappropriate
- Litigation on e-reserves may be necessary though this is not a necessarily attractive option
- AAP positions
- A set of FAQ’s will be posted on web site with regard to e-reserves to stake out AAP’s position.
- Preview
- For copyright purposes how do e-reserves differ from coursepaks
- Where the readings substitute for a printed coursepak nothing differs in terms of copyright treatment. Material included must have permissions granted
- Does restricted access make this fair use
- The answer will be NO
- Password protection only assures that students accessing system do not exceed numbers for whom fees are paid
- Very difficult to get timely information on use of these reserves
- May need legislation requiring Universities to post materials being used in e-reserves
- Some sunshine here is necessary in order to enforce copyrights
- In addition, the publishers have an obligation –
- The industry have to make mechanisms for granting permissions accessible
In conclusion, as e-reserves become more common, standards have been established and some of those standard practices are treatment of e-reserve material as fair use and therefore requiring no permissions or payment.
Our hope is that the publishing community will change that.
Question
How bring a case
Collect examples. Bringing a case is difficult because
- You are pursing state university (sovereign immunity)
- Pursuing customer
Copyright 2004 Jim Flowers
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