[ILL-L] copyright note
Bell.Jacobsen at state.sd.us
Bell.Jacobsen at state.sd.us
Fri Jun 27 10:07:29 EDT 2008
I try everything first before buying directly from the publisher. I
also email authors and can generally get the article that I need
directly from them. The articles that seem more difficult to get are
the ones that get publishing information electronically and the paper
article doesn't get published in paper for months.
Bell Jacobsen
South Dakota State Library
-----Original Message-----
From: ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org
[mailto:ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org] On Behalf Of Williams, Sophie
Sent: Friday, June 27, 2008 6:45 AM
To: Interlibrary Loan Listserv
Subject: RE: [ILL-L] copyright note
Just want to add if someone hasn't already done so, one might be able to
get articles from the publisher. Many journals are now online and
articles can be obtained with payment directly from the publisher.
This is a great information list. Have you noticed these days you can't
just be an ILL specialist but a computer software specialist too:-).
(sigh) Just a Friday thought.
Sophie Williams
Interlibrary Loan Team Leader
Randall Library
University of North Carolina Wilmington
601 S. College Rd.
Wilmington, NC 28403
From: ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org
[mailto:ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org] On Behalf Of Janice Shipp
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 4:53 PM
To: Interlibrary Loan Listserv
Subject: Re: [ILL-L] copyright note
Importance: High
In regards to copyright these are the guidelines we follow in our ILL
department:
CCG (CONTU Guidelines):
During the calendar year, a library may receive only five articles
published in a magazine title in the last five years. Do not count the
request if one of the following applies:
a. You have the title on order
b. The title is owned or missing
c. Or we have a current subscription but do not retain
back issues
When the limit of 5 is reached, either pay royalties through the
Copyright Compliance Center, or get articles through an authorized
delivery service (the fee they charge includes copyright royalties.
There is no need to count articles from document delivery for copyright
purposes. However, we may want to keep up with what we are requesting,
in case we feel we might want to subscribe to a periodical that we are
requesting from often.
CCL (Articles that do not fall under CCG, CONTU Guidelines.):
Record keeping is not necessary for articles older than five years.
After reviewing CCL, it is a local decision as to how many articles a
library wants to allow a patron to request over what period of time. See
the copyright compliance, CCL section attached.
Janice Shipp, Interlibrary Loan Coordinator
Jen Library - Interlibrary Loan Department
Savannah College of Art and Design
201 E Broughton Street
Savannah, GA 31401
Phone: 912.525.4658
Email: illscad at scad.edu <mailto:illscad at scad.edu>
jshipp at scad.edu <mailto:jshipp at scad.edu>
----- Original Message -----
From: "Susan M. Lee" <slee at ugf.edu <mailto:slee at ugf.edu> >
To: "Interlibrary Loan Listserv" <ill-l at webjunction.org
<mailto:ill-l at webjunction.org> >
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 10:00 AM
Subject: RE: [ILL-L] copyright note
Our interpretation of the guidelines was that you could order 5 articles
from any one title that were less than five years old. After that, you
pay copyright fees.
Susan Lee
Information Services Librarian
University of Great Falls
Great Falls, MT
slee at ugf.edu <mailto:slee at ugf.edu>
________________________________
From: ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org
<mailto:ill-l-bounces at webjunction.org> on behalf of John Stephens
Sent: Thu 6/26/2008 7:19 AM
To: Interlibrary Loan Listserv
Subject: Re: [ILL-L] copyright note
My thinking is that section 108(d) is not meant to make this specific
limitation (assuming that's what you're referring to from the discussion
a month of two back.) I take the single article from a periodical to
just be a part of the definition of what a copy is. We take it for
granted that if you order a "copy" through ILL that you're already
referring to ordering a single article, but this isn't necessarily the
case for everyone. I also think that it's somewhat unnatural and overly
strict compared to the rights that Section 108 provides in general, and
the fact that I don't see any mention of 108(d) interpreted this way in
the CONTU guidelines makes me think that this interpretation wasn't
intended. You've still got the whole not copying a major part of any
one work to deal with, but one article from one issue max seems a bit
too narrow to me. Then again, I wouldn't say I feel strongly about it
:p
John Stephens
ILL Coordinator
Swilley Library (GMA/GAUMUD)
Document Delivery wrote:
> I really am leaning toward thinking that we can't borrow more than one
> article from a single issue of any periodical, does anyone feel
strongly
> otherwise? Thanks,
>
>
> Edward Helmrich
> ILL Office
> Ryan Library
> Iona College VXI
> 914-633-2352
> docdelivery at iona.edu <mailto:docdelivery at iona.edu>
>
>
>
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