So long, and thanks for all the fish
As the year without any updates suggests, Emory Free Culture is defunct.
As the year without any updates suggests, Emory Free Culture is defunct.
I’ve been remiss in posting about the Open Access Rally. Attendance was low, and the newspaper photographer backed out at the last minute. We hope to present the resolution below to the new SGA legislature soon.
TITLE:
Resolution in Support of the Federal Research Public Access Act of 2006
AUTHOR:
Brian Pitts
WHEREAS,
writing research papers is an essential feature of the curriculum of many Emory University courses; and
WHEREAS,
such assignments require access to articles published in academic journals; and
WHEREAS,
student access to scholarly literature is primarily provided by subscriptions through university libraries; and
WHEREAS,
U.S. Senators John Cornyn (R-TX) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) introduced Senate Bill 2695, the Federal Research Public Access Act, on May 2, 2006; and
WHEREAS,
the Federal Research Public Access Act is awaiting reintroduction in the 110th Congress; and
WHEREAS,
the Federal Research Public Access Act would require that U.S. government agencies with annual extramural research expenditures of over $100 million make manuscripts of journal articles stemming from research funded by that agency publicly available via the Internet no later than six months after its publication in a peer-reviewed journal; and
WHEREAS,
the U.S. government invests more than $55 billion in research annually, resulting in thousands of journal articles published annually; and
WHEREAS,
this legislation will mean enhanced access to federally-funded research articles for researchers and students, according to the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition; and
WHEREAS,
Emory University libraries support this policy through their membership in the Alliance for Taxpayer Access; then
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the students of the Emory University urge the Administration to publicly support the Federal Research Public Access Act and access to academic research; and
THEREFORE, BE IT FUTHER RESOLVED that the students of the Emory University urge the student governments of other universities to do likewise; and
THEREFORE, BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED that the students of the Emory University urge the U.S. Congress to pass the Federal Research Public Access Act of 2006.
Government grants account for fully half of the output from university-based researchers and scholars in the U.S. In biology and biomedical-related disciplines alone – for example – the National Institutes of Health fund research that result in a tremendous 65,000 academic articles each year.
Yet: even though taxpayer money funds this research, the resulting articles are often published in journals to which many libraries cannot afford to subscribe.
Many organizations have been working together to change this. For example, there were two initiatives presented to the 109th U.S. Congress designed to make the results of federally funded research publicly available that will likely be reconsidered this year: the NIH Public Access Policy and the Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA). These initiatives focus on removing access barriers by making the peer-reviewed results of taxpayer-funded research available online for no extra charge to the American public - including researchers, teachers, and students.
Learn more at http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/students/
Emory University Libraries invites applications for the new position of Copyright Specialist and Rights Management Coordinator. The successful candidate will enjoy taking initiative and collaborating with others to establish, promote and provide services, policies and procedures to ensure that all digital content provided by the libraries for instructional use complies with copyright law, licensing agreements, and library policy.
Key Responsibilities: The individual manages a centralized rights management function and:
* Communicates and consults with faculty, students, librarians, IT professionals, university legal counsel and others on copyright policy for use of digital content for teaching and learning; conducts workshops and creates educational and training materials;
* Establishes standards and methods, within established guidelines, of interpretation to assess when additional rights must be secured; initiates contact with a rights clearinghouse or directly with the rights holder to negotiate and/or pay for permission;
* Organizes and implements the workflow to track rights information for all content used by the libraries for course reserves and instruction; hires and supervises student and temporary employees who assist with the rights management process; and,
* Maintains expertise in copyright law, emerging legal trends, proposed legislation, and common practice in the use of copyrighted and licenses material in higher education, particularly regarding the digitization of text, images, audio and video for instructional purposes; actively participates in local, regional, and national forums on intellectual property in higher education.
Qualifications: Required: Advanced degree in library/information science or relevant field. Knowledge of copyright law, especially related to digital works. Experience working with a variety of digital formats. Evidence of successful leadership and project management skills. Experience designing and delivering training workshops and creating effective training materials. Demonstrated user-focused service orientation and collaborative work style. Demonstrated ability to effectively communicate orally and in writing. Demonstrated interest in professional activity and contribution. Prefer experience working in an academic environment.
See the entire job posting here.
Emory Free Culture will meet in the Cox Hall Fishbowl at 7PM Thursday, November 30th.
The photographer from the Wheel missed the carpool, but Chris used his cameraphone to document our adventure.
We started out inside the store.

And ended up leaving the mall.

But not until we gave the very apologetic security guard a flyer and sticker. See the full set on flickr.
After June 10th the Apple Store at Lenox Mall thought they were safe.
They were wrong. Join Emory Free Culture and other anti-DRM activists as
we educate the public about the dangers of DRM using the iTunes Music
Store as our case study. Sign up to receive the details on when and
where to meet. Supplies and a photographer are already arranged.
http://defectivebydesign.org/en/actions/oct3/atlanta_apple_store
After a summer hiatus, CopyNight Atlanta is ready to resume Tuesday,
September 26th at 7:00 pm at the Starbucks Coffee at 1569 N. Decatur Rd
NE. We’ll be discussing the Copyright Modernization Act of 2006
(http://ipaction.org/campaigns/cma/) and planning a local action for the
Free Software Foundation’s October 3rd Day Against DRM
(http://defectivebydesign.org/en/blog/announce_day_against_drm).
Anyone who is interested in future announcements should join the
(low-traffic) CopyNight Atlanta mailing list at
http://copynight.org/locations.html#atl
Don’t miss out!
Staking Out Intellectual Property
Andrew Swerlick
Posted: 9/19/06
“The intangible nature of language begins to haunt me, and I wonder how it’s possible for anyone to own words. Exactly what have I been deprived of?” These are the words David Bowers spoke after discovering many of his poems had been plagiarized by others. His question highlights the murkiness of the world of copyrights, patents and trademarks. Our minds are divided between the language of ownership, of property, of the right to the fruits of our labor and the “intangible nature” of not only language, but ideas in general.
Although thinkers have struggled with these notions for centuries, these quandaries are just beginning to come into the view of the public eye. The digital age has placed intellectual property in the limelight. In the form of DVDs and movie sales, it has become America’s No. 1 export.
Newspapers are filled with stories about the latest intellectual property lawsuit, Amazon.com’s patent of one-click shopping being the most prominent, and cereal bar company Cereality’s attempt to patent “displaying and mixing competitively-branded food products [cereal]” and adding “a third portion of liquid [milk].” Many Web sites offer advice to businesses, claiming that those who follow certain methods will be able to capitalize on the value of their intellectual property.
This explosion is in part due to two changes in the legal structure of the U.S. patent system. The first occurred in 1990, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that software algorithms were patentable inventions; the second in 1998 when the Supreme Court did the same for business methods. From these changes came a slew of new patent applications. When many of these patents were approved, however, there was a backlash. The backlash was led by a surprising alliance of free market advocates and anti-corporate progressives.
In recent years the movement against these changes has gained a great deal of momentum, but because the public debate about intellectual property is still in its infancy, it suffers from some problems. One of the most glaring is the language often used in respect to intellectual property issues.
In response to criticism about its patent applications, Cereality founder David Roth said: “We’re just two guys trying to protect ourselves from big companies that could steal our intellectual property.” But to echo the words of David Bowers, how do you steal something as intangible as an idea?
This is not to say that intellectual property is an illegitimate notion, but instead that arguing for its legitimacy using the same language as traditional property is misguided. Despite the use of the term property in both instances, traditional property and intellectual property are fundamentally different. As Thomas Jefferson said, “If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea � Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper [candle] at mine, receives light without darkening me.”
In other words, when two people share a car, each finds the car less useful. But when two people share an idea, its usefulness does not dwindle. Instead, the defense of intellectual property lies in the language of economics - of incentives. We grant holders of an idea a monopoly on that idea to give them and others an incentive to produce more like it. But the benefits of this incentive are in part countered by the restrictive limitations this monopoly places on everyone else.
In other words, there is a balance to be sought between incentives and freedom. The language of the intellectual property debate in its current form, a form that speaks of rights and ownership, is black and white and doesn’t recognize the need for balance. Instead, the intellectual property debate should be a discussion of the practical benefits of any given intellectual property scheme. Without this sort of discussion America may find itself falling behind in the new world of ideas.
Andrew Swerlick is a College junior from Atlanta. He is the treasurer of Emory Free Culture.
Software Freedom Day 2006 was a great success for Emory Free Culture. We distributed nearly 50 CDs and flyers and signed up several new members. More details and pictures are available at the SFD wiki, and the files that went into our CD for Windows can be downloaded here.

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