Resource list to accompany presentation at the 2012 Best Practices Exchange Conference. December 5, 2012. Annapolis, MD Track: Access and Sustainability 4
http://goo.gl/uRvJt
This document discusses privacy issues related to libraries in the digital age. It provides an overview of privacy laws in the US and how they relate to libraries. While the right to privacy is not explicitly outlined in the Constitution, many court cases have recognized this right. Most states have passed laws to protect library user privacy, though these laws often do not address new digital technologies. The document examines challenges to privacy from entities like the FBI and technologies like digital records, filters and reference services. It concludes with recommendations that libraries update policies to collect minimum data, limit access, inform users of policies and collaborate with vendors on security.
Activity 10 timeline history of internetMoneFatima
ARPAnet is established in 1836 connecting four major US universities to provide communications in the event of military attacks. In 1972, Ray Tomlinson introduces electronic mail using the @ symbol to distinguish sender and network names. TCP/IP is designed in 1973 becoming the standard for internet communication, allowing file transfer between computers. The first internet virus in 1988 temporarily shuts down 10% of servers. In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee develops the World Wide Web at CERN allowing hyperlinked documents across the internet. By 1996, approximately 45 million people use the internet with 30 million in North America.
This presentation looks at issues surrounding the licensing of research data for reuse. It outlines the concepts behind data licensing, looks at data reuse licenses used by CESSDA data archives, considers the role of Creative Commons and Open Data Licenses in sharing social science research data, and highlights some of the problems, issues, and challenges facing archives and repositories.
1. The document discusses the relationship between databases and narratives. It explores how databases organize information without hierarchical order, while narratives create cause-and-effect trajectories from seemingly unordered items.
2. Databases have become central to the creative process in computer-based media. While databases themselves lack narrative sequence, users can traverse databases to construct narratives.
3. The document examines how all new media objects can be considered databases, and how databases can support narrative structures, though they are sometimes viewed as "natural enemies".
This document provides an annotated bibliography of legal ethics materials available on the Internet. It begins with an introduction explaining the increased importance and usefulness of the Internet for legal research. It then describes some initial insights the author gained from extensive research to compile the bibliography, such as the mix of primary and secondary sources available and the circular nature of links between sites. The bibliography then summarizes several of the most comprehensive legal ethics websites, including Legalethics.com, which contains materials on ethics and the Internet, and links to other primary and research resources.
1. Anak-anak membaca bersama-sama tentang stoking dan bunga hiasan di ruang tamu.
2. Mereka membahas jawaban soal buku aktiviti dan melengkapi ayat yang tidak selesai.
This document discusses privacy issues related to libraries in the digital age. It provides an overview of privacy laws in the US and how they relate to libraries. While the right to privacy is not explicitly outlined in the Constitution, many court cases have recognized this right. Most states have passed laws to protect library user privacy, though these laws often do not address new digital technologies. The document examines challenges to privacy from entities like the FBI and technologies like digital records, filters and reference services. It concludes with recommendations that libraries update policies to collect minimum data, limit access, inform users of policies and collaborate with vendors on security.
Activity 10 timeline history of internetMoneFatima
ARPAnet is established in 1836 connecting four major US universities to provide communications in the event of military attacks. In 1972, Ray Tomlinson introduces electronic mail using the @ symbol to distinguish sender and network names. TCP/IP is designed in 1973 becoming the standard for internet communication, allowing file transfer between computers. The first internet virus in 1988 temporarily shuts down 10% of servers. In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee develops the World Wide Web at CERN allowing hyperlinked documents across the internet. By 1996, approximately 45 million people use the internet with 30 million in North America.
This presentation looks at issues surrounding the licensing of research data for reuse. It outlines the concepts behind data licensing, looks at data reuse licenses used by CESSDA data archives, considers the role of Creative Commons and Open Data Licenses in sharing social science research data, and highlights some of the problems, issues, and challenges facing archives and repositories.
1. The document discusses the relationship between databases and narratives. It explores how databases organize information without hierarchical order, while narratives create cause-and-effect trajectories from seemingly unordered items.
2. Databases have become central to the creative process in computer-based media. While databases themselves lack narrative sequence, users can traverse databases to construct narratives.
3. The document examines how all new media objects can be considered databases, and how databases can support narrative structures, though they are sometimes viewed as "natural enemies".
This document provides an annotated bibliography of legal ethics materials available on the Internet. It begins with an introduction explaining the increased importance and usefulness of the Internet for legal research. It then describes some initial insights the author gained from extensive research to compile the bibliography, such as the mix of primary and secondary sources available and the circular nature of links between sites. The bibliography then summarizes several of the most comprehensive legal ethics websites, including Legalethics.com, which contains materials on ethics and the Internet, and links to other primary and research resources.
1. Anak-anak membaca bersama-sama tentang stoking dan bunga hiasan di ruang tamu.
2. Mereka membahas jawaban soal buku aktiviti dan melengkapi ayat yang tidak selesai.
What Your Tweets Tell Us About You: Identity, Ownership, and Privacy in TwitterKrisKasianovitz
This document discusses identity, ownership, and privacy issues related to archiving and analyzing Twitter data. It provides three recommendations for libraries considering collecting social media data: 1) determine how it fits with their institutional goals and mitigate associated risks, 2) engage researchers early in the process, and 3) develop clear collection and deposit policies. The document also notes that Twitter should add more explicit wording to their privacy policies.
What Your Tweets Tell Us About You, Speaker NotesKrisKasianovitz
This document discusses the challenges of archiving and analyzing social media data from platforms like Twitter. It notes that researchers currently focus more on collecting and analyzing this data rather than addressing long-term preservation or privacy issues. Different disciplines also have varying views on whether social media posts should be treated as human subject research or public publications, leading to conflicts in how privacy is handled. The document aims to start a discussion on developing best practices for balancing privacy and open access when curating social media archives.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses several animal species, including tigers, cats, peacocks, and lions. Tigers are the largest cat species, able to reach over 3 meters in length and weigh over 300 kg. They have distinctive dark vertical stripes on orange fur and exceptionally large canine teeth, the longest among felines at up to 74.5 mm.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (American...Tom Moritz
The document discusses the development of digital libraries from experimental stages to mature and sustainable interoperable systems. It describes three stages: 1) Experimental stage in the 1990s focusing on collections of digital materials, 2) Developing stage in the late 1990s considering custodianship and sustainability, and 3) Potential future mature stage with real interoperable digital libraries supported through normal funding channels. The goal is moving from isolated digital collections to interconnected digital libraries.
Linked Data and Canadian Legal ResourcesF. Tim Knight
An overview of the basic theory and building blocks that support linked data; the growth of the so-called linked open data cloud; how this idea might be applied to legal resources and some of the challenges involved; and what organizations like CanLII can do to support linked data developments. Delivered as part of the CanLII Law, Government and Open Data Conference and Hackathon held at the University of Ottawa on September 13 and 14, 2013.
This document provides a foreword and overview of the report "Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information" published by the Office of Technology Assessment in 1986. The foreword notes that technological developments are impacting all aspects of the intellectual property system and that fundamental changes in information technologies will require new policy solutions. The report was requested by members of Congress to examine the impact of technologies like audio/video recorders, computer programs, databases and networks on copyright law effectiveness. It took an interdisciplinary approach including legal, economic, technological and social perspectives.
These slides are for a presentation given to the National Digital Forum in November, 2015. The presentation introduces Creative Commons licences and offers three recommendations to heritage institutions on how to make their collections more open.
This document provides an introduction and background to a paper comparing U.S. fair use doctrine and Canadian fair dealing provisions in advancing freedom of expression for non-fiction filmmakers. It discusses the origins of fair use and fair dealing in the U.S. and Canada, how rights clearance cultures have created challenges for documentarians, and how fair use and fair dealing, as well as industry guidelines, have attempted to address these issues. The document sets up an analysis of how the two legal frameworks have developed over time and how they compare in supporting documentarians' ability to incorporate existing works in their films.
The case involved a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Gregory B. Clark's parents after he died from injuries sustained in a car accident. Clark was a passenger in a car driven by an intoxicated minor. The plaintiffs sued the state of Arizona, arguing the state was partially responsible because it had abolished its dram shop act, which had previously allowed for liability against establishments that served alcohol to minors. The appellate court ruled that abolishing the dram shop act was a discretionary function of the state legislature and did not create a special relationship between the state and minors, so the state was immune from liability under the public duty doctrine
The document discusses increasing access to cultural heritage through more open licensing and reducing barriers to access and reuse. It notes that digital access has increased what people can do with cultural works. Free and open licenses like Creative Commons are presented as a way to clearly communicate usage rights and foster dissemination and reuse of heritage items. However, copyright and institutions' tensions between facilitating access versus traditional kaitiaki roles can still present legal and policy barriers. The document advocates for heritage institutions to more openly license out-of-copyright and institution-held copyright works using Creative Commons to help address this.
1) Governments face tensions between privacy and security when collecting data on individuals, and between free speech and censorship online. Constitutional protections of privacy, expression, and other rights aim to address these tensions.
2) However, these protections are not always effective, as governments have compelled decryption or carried out mass data retention programs. Courts have sometimes ruled these actions disproportionate or not necessary.
3) Technological designs that support privacy principles like data minimization can help uphold privacy and free speech laws, rather than having technology determine the scope of these rights.
Colbern C. Stuart, III is an attorney and president of the California Coalition for Families and Children. He has over 30 years of experience in intellectual property and complex civil litigation. Some of his representative cases include successfully representing a peer-to-peer company in a copyright case and establishing that the WINDOWS trademark is generic. He is also currently involved in civil rights litigation against the California divorce industry on behalf of parents' and children's rights.
Libraries are shifting from physical institutions to becoming more "borderless" networks as they adapt to linked open data structures. As libraries share data across the web through unique URIs and RDF triples, it creates a "web of data" that helps both humans and machines understand complex concepts. However, linked open data also faces challenges related to data discrepancies, copyright and privacy issues. All libraries and cultural heritage institutions will need to cooperate and adapt their data practices to fully realize the benefits of linked open data.
1 - Theories Of Intellectual Property William FischerJoe Osborn
The document discusses four main theories of intellectual property:
1) Utilitarian theory which argues that intellectual property laws should maximize social welfare by balancing incentives for creation with public access.
2) Natural rights theory based on John Locke's labor theory of property which sees intellectual creations as naturally owned by their creators.
3) Personhood theory based on Kant and Hegel which sees intellectual property as important for human fulfillment and expression of one's will.
4) Other theories analyze how specific intellectual property doctrines like copyright and trademark laws can be shaped to achieve the goals of the different theories.
This document discusses the history and legal framework of freedom of speech in the United States. It outlines key Supreme Court cases that have established precedents, including Schenck v. United States which introduced the "clear and present danger" test, and Marsh v. Alabama which established that the First Amendment can apply to private property serving as a public forum. The document then examines questions around whether social media sites can legally censor speech and whether Section 230 or the Constitution need updating to address the role of modern internet platforms.
The right to be forgotten allows individuals to request that certain personal information about themselves be removed from internet search results or records. Specifically, it gives people the ability to have embarrassing, outdated, or irrelevant information deleted so that others cannot access it through search engines. The right developed in the EU through legislation and a 2014 court ruling requiring Google to comply with removal requests. However, critics argue it could infringe on freedom of speech and expression in other jurisdictions like the US.
What Your Tweets Tell Us About You: Identity, Ownership, and Privacy in TwitterKrisKasianovitz
This document discusses identity, ownership, and privacy issues related to archiving and analyzing Twitter data. It provides three recommendations for libraries considering collecting social media data: 1) determine how it fits with their institutional goals and mitigate associated risks, 2) engage researchers early in the process, and 3) develop clear collection and deposit policies. The document also notes that Twitter should add more explicit wording to their privacy policies.
What Your Tweets Tell Us About You, Speaker NotesKrisKasianovitz
This document discusses the challenges of archiving and analyzing social media data from platforms like Twitter. It notes that researchers currently focus more on collecting and analyzing this data rather than addressing long-term preservation or privacy issues. Different disciplines also have varying views on whether social media posts should be treated as human subject research or public publications, leading to conflicts in how privacy is handled. The document aims to start a discussion on developing best practices for balancing privacy and open access when curating social media archives.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses several animal species, including tigers, cats, peacocks, and lions. Tigers are the largest cat species, able to reach over 3 meters in length and weigh over 300 kg. They have distinctive dark vertical stripes on orange fur and exceptionally large canine teeth, the longest among felines at up to 74.5 mm.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (American...Tom Moritz
The document discusses the development of digital libraries from experimental stages to mature and sustainable interoperable systems. It describes three stages: 1) Experimental stage in the 1990s focusing on collections of digital materials, 2) Developing stage in the late 1990s considering custodianship and sustainability, and 3) Potential future mature stage with real interoperable digital libraries supported through normal funding channels. The goal is moving from isolated digital collections to interconnected digital libraries.
Linked Data and Canadian Legal ResourcesF. Tim Knight
An overview of the basic theory and building blocks that support linked data; the growth of the so-called linked open data cloud; how this idea might be applied to legal resources and some of the challenges involved; and what organizations like CanLII can do to support linked data developments. Delivered as part of the CanLII Law, Government and Open Data Conference and Hackathon held at the University of Ottawa on September 13 and 14, 2013.
This document provides a foreword and overview of the report "Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information" published by the Office of Technology Assessment in 1986. The foreword notes that technological developments are impacting all aspects of the intellectual property system and that fundamental changes in information technologies will require new policy solutions. The report was requested by members of Congress to examine the impact of technologies like audio/video recorders, computer programs, databases and networks on copyright law effectiveness. It took an interdisciplinary approach including legal, economic, technological and social perspectives.
These slides are for a presentation given to the National Digital Forum in November, 2015. The presentation introduces Creative Commons licences and offers three recommendations to heritage institutions on how to make their collections more open.
This document provides an introduction and background to a paper comparing U.S. fair use doctrine and Canadian fair dealing provisions in advancing freedom of expression for non-fiction filmmakers. It discusses the origins of fair use and fair dealing in the U.S. and Canada, how rights clearance cultures have created challenges for documentarians, and how fair use and fair dealing, as well as industry guidelines, have attempted to address these issues. The document sets up an analysis of how the two legal frameworks have developed over time and how they compare in supporting documentarians' ability to incorporate existing works in their films.
The case involved a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Gregory B. Clark's parents after he died from injuries sustained in a car accident. Clark was a passenger in a car driven by an intoxicated minor. The plaintiffs sued the state of Arizona, arguing the state was partially responsible because it had abolished its dram shop act, which had previously allowed for liability against establishments that served alcohol to minors. The appellate court ruled that abolishing the dram shop act was a discretionary function of the state legislature and did not create a special relationship between the state and minors, so the state was immune from liability under the public duty doctrine
The document discusses increasing access to cultural heritage through more open licensing and reducing barriers to access and reuse. It notes that digital access has increased what people can do with cultural works. Free and open licenses like Creative Commons are presented as a way to clearly communicate usage rights and foster dissemination and reuse of heritage items. However, copyright and institutions' tensions between facilitating access versus traditional kaitiaki roles can still present legal and policy barriers. The document advocates for heritage institutions to more openly license out-of-copyright and institution-held copyright works using Creative Commons to help address this.
1) Governments face tensions between privacy and security when collecting data on individuals, and between free speech and censorship online. Constitutional protections of privacy, expression, and other rights aim to address these tensions.
2) However, these protections are not always effective, as governments have compelled decryption or carried out mass data retention programs. Courts have sometimes ruled these actions disproportionate or not necessary.
3) Technological designs that support privacy principles like data minimization can help uphold privacy and free speech laws, rather than having technology determine the scope of these rights.
Colbern C. Stuart, III is an attorney and president of the California Coalition for Families and Children. He has over 30 years of experience in intellectual property and complex civil litigation. Some of his representative cases include successfully representing a peer-to-peer company in a copyright case and establishing that the WINDOWS trademark is generic. He is also currently involved in civil rights litigation against the California divorce industry on behalf of parents' and children's rights.
Libraries are shifting from physical institutions to becoming more "borderless" networks as they adapt to linked open data structures. As libraries share data across the web through unique URIs and RDF triples, it creates a "web of data" that helps both humans and machines understand complex concepts. However, linked open data also faces challenges related to data discrepancies, copyright and privacy issues. All libraries and cultural heritage institutions will need to cooperate and adapt their data practices to fully realize the benefits of linked open data.
1 - Theories Of Intellectual Property William FischerJoe Osborn
The document discusses four main theories of intellectual property:
1) Utilitarian theory which argues that intellectual property laws should maximize social welfare by balancing incentives for creation with public access.
2) Natural rights theory based on John Locke's labor theory of property which sees intellectual creations as naturally owned by their creators.
3) Personhood theory based on Kant and Hegel which sees intellectual property as important for human fulfillment and expression of one's will.
4) Other theories analyze how specific intellectual property doctrines like copyright and trademark laws can be shaped to achieve the goals of the different theories.
This document discusses the history and legal framework of freedom of speech in the United States. It outlines key Supreme Court cases that have established precedents, including Schenck v. United States which introduced the "clear and present danger" test, and Marsh v. Alabama which established that the First Amendment can apply to private property serving as a public forum. The document then examines questions around whether social media sites can legally censor speech and whether Section 230 or the Constitution need updating to address the role of modern internet platforms.
The right to be forgotten allows individuals to request that certain personal information about themselves be removed from internet search results or records. Specifically, it gives people the ability to have embarrassing, outdated, or irrelevant information deleted so that others cannot access it through search engines. The right developed in the EU through legislation and a 2014 court ruling requiring Google to comply with removal requests. However, critics argue it could infringe on freedom of speech and expression in other jurisdictions like the US.
BUSW 390Please complete the following table and submTawnaDelatorrejs
BUSW 390
Please complete the following table and submit.
Legal Term Definition
Relevant Case Issues
What Elements Apply
· Standing (Right) to Sue
Allows for a party to bring suit to a court. Within the federal court any legal action cannot be brought to the court on the grounds of an individual or group being dissatisfied. The federal court only possess the authority to resolve authentic disputes according to Article III of the Constitution.
Secondary Source: Legal Information Institute. (n.d.). Standing. Legal Information Institute. Retrieved from https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/standing.
Primary Source: Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife (90-1424), 504 U.S. 555 (1992)
Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War, (72-1188), 418 U.S. 208 (1974),
“Standing alone, would adversely affect only the generalized interest of all citizens in constitutional governance . . . We reaffirm Levitt in holding that standing to sue may not be predicated upon an interest of this kind…)
Member of the United States Armed Forces Reservist committee opposing their involvement in the Vietnam War pursed a class action against the United States Secretary of Defense. Respondents utilized the fact that they were United States citizen and taxpayers to pursue this class action however the respondents lacked standing to sue as taxpayers and citizens.
Legal Information Institute. (1992, June 12). Lujan v. defenders of wildlife, 504 U.S. 555 (1992). Legal Information Institute. Retrieved from https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/90-1424.ZO.html.
1.The plaintiff must has experienced an injury that is considered of a legally protected interest being (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent
2. There must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct brought before the court
3.It must be likely, rather than speculative, that a favorable decision by the court will redress the injury
Secondary Source: Legal Information Institute. (n.d.). Standing. Legal Information Institute. Retrieved from https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/standing.
Relation to Case: Schlesinger v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War, (72-1188), 418 U.S. 208 (1974),
Respondents must be able to proof that they will suffer an injury. This claim was found to lack standing due to the fact that the respondents could only tie in abstract injuries rather than concrete injuries.
Primary Source: Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife (90-1424), 504 U.S. 555 (1992)
· Diversity of Citizenship
Is when all the parties on one side of a controversy contains a different citizenship then those of the other party. This is a requirement of diversity of jurisdiction because it promotes an unbiased court for the defendants.
Primary Source: Diversity of Citizenship Clause (U.S Const. Art. III § 2, cl. 1)
Secondary Source: Legal Information Institute. (2020, July). Diversity of citizenship. Legal Information Institute. Retrieved from https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/diversity_of_citizenship. ...
Pol 2301, united states government 1 course learnissuserfa5723
This document outlines the learning outcomes and activities for a unit on civil rights and civil liberties in a college course on US Government. The unit focuses on identifying the attributes of the US Constitution and Bill of Rights, defining civil liberties and rights, discussing landmark Supreme Court cases related to these topics, and summarizing movements to achieve equal rights in the US. Students will engage in lessons, readings from two textbook chapters, and a unit assessment to meet the learning outcomes, which include understanding privacy rights, reproductive rights, and communications privacy as they relate to civil liberties.
This document provides an overview of copyright law in the United States. It defines copyright as protection for original works of authorship under title 17 of the U.S. Code. Infringement occurs when someone violates the exclusive rights of the copyright owner without permission. Certain materials like facts, ideas, and works in the public domain can be used freely. Fair use allows limited use of copyrighted works for purposes like criticism or research. Creative Commons licensing enables sharing of some works within certain conditions. Permission is required to use a work beyond fair use or Creative Commons terms.
Similar to State Government Information and the Copyright Conundrum (20)
State Government Information and the Copyright Conundrum
1. State Government Information and the Copyright Conundrum
Best Practices Exchange, Dec. 5, 2012
Kris Kasianovitz, krisk11@stanford.edu
Resource List1
Problem Statement:
Because states can copyright their publications, this unduly restricts memory and knowledge
institutions, i.e. libraries from providing access to, use, re-use, reformatting, re-distribution, and
archiving of these materials.
Presentation
Kasianovitz, Kris. (2012). State Government Information and the Copyright Conundrum.
Best Practices Exchange Presentation. http://goo.gl/uRvJt
Hathi Trust Permission for Rights Holders
http://www.hathitrust.org/permissions_agreement
Creative Commons Public Domain tools
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/
Creative Commons Licenses
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
Google Search of ―state government documents‖ ―public domain‖ http://goo.gl/xAHUd
Bibliography
American Association of Law Libraries.―Digital Access to Legal Information Committee‖, n.d.
http://www.aallnet.org/main-menu/Leadership-Governance/committee/activecmtes/dali.html.
Committee on Intellectual Property Rights and the Emerging Information Infrastructure. Computer
Science and Telecommunications Board. National Research Council.The digital dilemma :
intellectual property in the information age. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 2000.
Dmitrieva, Irina Y. ―State Ownership of Copyrights in Primary Law Materials.‖ Hastings
Communications and Entertainment Law Journal 23 (2001 2000): 81.
http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/hascom23&collection=journals&index=&
id=96.
1
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0
Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
2. Fortney, K. ―Ending Copyright Claims in State Primary Legal Materials: Toward an Open Source
Legal System.‖ Law Libr. J. 102 (2010): 59–705.
Ghosh, S. ―Copyright as Privatization: The Case of Model Codes.‖ Tul. L. Rev. 78 (2003): 653.
http://heinonlinebackup.com/hol-cgi-bin/get_pdf.cgi?handle=hein.journals/tulr78§ion=38.
———. ―Deprivatizing Copyright.‖ Case W. Res. L. Rev. 54 (2003): 387.
http://heinonlinebackup.com/hol-cgi-
bin/get_pdf.cgi?handle=hein.journals/cwrlrv54§ion=16.
Howard, Jennifer. ―HathiTrust Case Highlights Authors’ Fears About Fate of Their Work Online.‖
The Chronicle of Higher Education, October 2, 2011, sec. Hot Type.
http://chronicle.com/article/Hot-Type-HathiTrust-
Lawsuit/129241/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en.
―IFLA Statement on Legal Deposit‖, n.d. http://www.ifla.org/publications/ifla-statement-on-legal-
deposit.
Kasianovitz, Kris. ―Why Care About Copyright?‖ DttP 36, no. 2 (Summer 2008): 12–
14.http://wikis.ala.org/godort/images/d/d0/DttP_36n2_web.pdf
Larivière, Jules. ―Guidelines for Legal Deposit Legislation‖, n.d.
http://archive.ifla.org/VII/s1/gnl/legaldep1.htm.
Nodiff, M. J. “Copyrightability of Works of the Federal and State Governments Under the 1976 Act.”
. Louis ULJ 29 (1984): 91. http://heinonlinebackup.com/hol-cgi-
bin/get_pdf.cgi?handle=hein.journals/stlulj29§ion=14.
―State-by-State Report on Authentication of Online Legal Resources‖, n.d.
http://www.aallnet.org/main-menu/Publications/products/Report-on-Authentication-of-Online-
Legal-Resources.html.
―State-by-State Report on Permanent Public Access to Electronic Government Information‖, n.d.
http://www.aallnet.org/Archived/Government-Relations/Issue-Briefs-and-
Reports/2003/ppareport.html.
Svengalis, Kendall. ―Chapter 2: A Brief History of Legal Publishing.‖ In Legal Information Buyer’s
Guide & Reference Manual, 2010.
http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.lbr/lebuygrm0014&id=16&collection=lbr&index=.
3. Case Law
Banks v Manchester.128 U.S. 244, *9 S. Ct. 36, **32 L. Ed. 425, ***1888 U.S. LEXIS 2216
Date Accessed: 2012/11/30.
The court affirmed the denial of copyright protection because judicial opinions were public
property, free to all citizens, and could not be copyrighted.
COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, NEW YORK, Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee, --v.-- FIRST
AMERICAN REAL ESTATE SOLUTIONS, Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant, EXPERIAN
INFORMATION SOLUTIONS, INC., doing business as Experian, doing business as Experian
Real Estate Solutions, TRW REDI PROPERTY DATA, also known as Information Systems and
Services, Inc., Defendants.261 F.3d 179, *2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 16706, **59 U.S.P.Q.2D
(BNA) 1639Copy. L. Rep. (CCH) P28,322Date Accessed: 2012/11/30.
PETER VEECK, doing business as Regional Web, Plaintiff/Counter Defendant-Appellant,
versus SOUTHERN BUILDING CODE CONGRESS INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
Defendant/Counter Claimant-Appellee.293 F.3d 791, *2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 10963, **63
U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1225Copy. L. Rep. (CCH) P28,448
COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA et al., Petitioners, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SANTA
CLARA COUNTY, Respondent; CALIFORNIA FIRST AMENDMENT COALITION, Real
Party in Interest. 170 Cal. App. 4th 1301, *89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 374, **2009 Cal. App. LEXIS
148, ***37 Media L. Rep. 1331
BUILDING OFFICIALS & CODE ADM., PLAINTIFF, APPELLEE, v. CODE TECHNOLOGY, INC.,
DEFENDANT, APPELLANT. 170 Cal. App. 4th 1301, *89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 374, **2009 Cal.
App. LEXIS 148, ***37 Media L. Rep. 1331