The Impending Demise of Greedy For-Profit Scientific Publishers (Part I)
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Showing posts with label Copyright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copyright. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Invitation to subscribe to Denise Nicholson's copyright issues blog
(I received this invitation from Denise Nicholson, the Copyright Services Librarian at Univ of the Witwatersrand, and thought others might like to subscribe to this useful service - Eileen)
" I invite you and your colleagues to subscribe to my free online information service called Copyright & A2K Issues - for examples of previous items. The topics covered include copyright, plagiarism, digitisation issues, library issues, traditional knowledge, mobile technologies, conference alerts, open access, open
publishing/scholarship, issues affecting access to information and freedom of expression, open learning resources, issues affecting access for persons with sensory-disabilities, useful resources & websites, etc.
If you are interested, please email me (Denise.Nicholson@wits.ac.za) with "Subscribe to Copyright & A2K Issues" in the subject field so I can add your nameto the service.
Regards
Denise"
" I invite you and your colleagues to subscribe to my free online information service called Copyright & A2K Issues - for examples of previous items. The topics covered include copyright, plagiarism, digitisation issues, library issues, traditional knowledge, mobile technologies, conference alerts, open access, open
publishing/scholarship, issues affecting access to information and freedom of expression, open learning resources, issues affecting access for persons with sensory-disabilities, useful resources & websites, etc.
If you are interested, please email me (Denise.Nicholson@wits.ac.za) with "Subscribe to Copyright & A2K Issues" in the subject field so I can add your nameto the service.
Regards
Denise"
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Quo Vadis copyright?
"If copyright is to survive into the 21st Century and beyond, it must adapt
to cater for new forms of homogeneous works. However, if it is to be
adapted to try and protect forms of heterogeneous works, it will not
survive in a coherent form..." (by Prof OH Dean, Stellenbosch University)
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