LegReg Irregular Newsgram 11/2/2005
in this newsgram:
1. BUSINESS GROUPS WANT TO LIMIT PATRIOT ACT
2. REPORT ADDRESSES SUSTAINABILITY OF DATABASES
3. WE'VE NOT SEEN THE LAST OF THE COPYRIGHT CLASS ACTION
4. INSURANCE FOR USE OF OPEN SOURCE
5. MIT & NOKIA FORM RESEARCH LAB
6. KEY OPEN ACCESS CONCEPTS
7. BIOMED CENTRAL RESPONDS TO ALPSP's STUDY 'THE FACTS ABOUT OPEN ACCESS'
8. Z39.19 NOW PUBLISHED
9. CONGRESS DEMANDS LIMITS ON 'SENSITIVE SECURE INFORMATION'
10.MORE HINTS POINT TO IDENTITY OF CONNECTICUT LIBRARY
11.INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR OF INFORMATION SCIENCE CONFERENCES
1-----BUSINESS GROUPS WANT TO LIMIT PATRIOT ACT
from: "Patrice McDermott" <pmcdermott@alawash.org>
to: ALA Legislation Assembly <la@ala.org>
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Patriot-Act-Business.html
October 6, 2005
Business Groups Want to Limit Patriot Act
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP)
-- Some of the nation's most powerful business groups are
splitting with the Bush administration over whether to restrict the
anti-terror USA Patriot Act.
The business groups complained to Congress on Wednesday that the Patriot Act
makes it too easy for the government to get confidential business records.
That put them at odds with one of President Bush's top priorities -- the
unfettered extension of the law passed after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
2-----REPORT ADDRESSES SUSTAINABILITY OF DATABASES
from: Edupage, 14 October 2005:
A new report from a National Science Board task force calls on the federal
government to implement a clear and focused strategy to ensure that growing
collections of information in databases remain accessible and easy to use in
the coming years. The report argues that the National Science Foundation
(NSF), which has financed many technological developments in recent years, has
not crafted policies and strategies
that consider and address the range of technologies for storing data. The
report praises the improvements that have been made to systems that collect
various types of material in digital form and make those materials widely
available online, but it says the need is "urgent" for a strategy to guarantee
the viability of those materials. The concern, according to the report, is
that as technology platforms continue to evolve, some digital content could be
left in the lurch, unable to be accessed by newer systems. The report makes a
number of recommendations for the NSF, including coordinating efforts between
data storage and users of those data, promoting effective training, and
supporting efforts to educate "a sufficient number of high-quality data
scientists" to manage such systems. Inside Higher Ed, 13 October 2005
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/10/13/digital
3-----WE'VE NOT SEEN THE LAST OF THE COPYRIGHT CLASS ACTION
from: digital-copyright Digest 12 Oct 2005 15:00:00 -0000 Issue 557
By Carole Ebbinghouse, Information Today, October 10, 2005
http://www.infotoday.com/newsbreaks/nb051010-1.shtml
"The case derived from the Tasini lawsuit (New York Times Co., Inc., et al. v.
Tasini et al.) has been variously called The Copyright Class Action and In Re
Literary Works in Electronic Databases Copyright Litigation (MDL No. 1379)."
4-----INSURANCE FOR USE OF OPEN SOURCE:
from: Edupage, 31 October 2005
Using open source software exposes organizations to a number of risks not
typically encountered with proprietary software, and a group of companies is
now offering policies to address that risk. Kiln Risk Solutions, which is a
division of Lloyd's of London, is working with Miller Insurance Services and
Open Source Risk Management to provide coverage for the kinds of claims that
have been seen in recent years over open source technologies. Claims concern
issues such as copyright, whether proprietary code is included in an open
source application, and failure to meet the terms of open source licenses.
Linux operating systems, for example, fall under something known as the
General Public License, and organizations using Linux must follow the terms of
that
license. In some cases, the new policies being offered for open source might
cover the costs of bringing code into compliance with applicable licenses.
ZDNet, 31 October 2005
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-5924112.html
5-----MIT & NOKIA FORM RESEARCH LAB:
from: Edupage, 28 October 2005
MIT and Nokia announced a venture to create a joint research lab, to be
called the Nokia Research Center Cambridge. The lab is part of MIT's Computer
Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and researchers there will
study "the state of the art in mobile computing and communications," according
to a statement from the two organizations. Specifically, researchers will
focus on low-power hardware and user interfaces, in particular those that are
based on speech. More broadly, the center will address questions concerning
software architecture, wireless technologies, and methods of managing
information. The center will comprise about 20 researchers from each of the
two organizations and will be directed by James Hicks of the Nokia Research
Center.
The Register, 28 October 2005
http://www.theregister.com/2005/10/28/mit_nokia_joint_research/
6-----KEY OPEN ACCESS CONCEPTS
from: "Charles W. Bailey, Jr." <cbailey@uh.edu>
An excerpt from the Open Access Bibliography: Liberating Scholarly Literature
with E-Prints and Open Access Journals (OAB) that provides a brief overview
of OA concepts is now available in HTML-tagged format. Additional links have
been added, and old links checked and updated. As part of the OAB, it is under
a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.
http://www.escholarlypub.com/oab/keyoaconcepts.htm
7-----BIOMED CENTRAL RESPONDS TO ALPSP'S STUDY 'THE FACTS ABOUT OPEN ACCESS'
date: Sun, 16 Oct 2005 11:45:06 PM EDT
from: "Grace Baynes" <Grace@biomedcentral.com>
to: <diglib@infoserv.inist.fr>
BioMed Central welcomes objective research into open access publishing.
Unfortunately, however, the report published by ALPSP this week ("The Facts
about Open Access") contains significant factual inaccuracies. We also
disagree with many of the reports interpretations and conclusions. The two
most serious problems with the report are that it inaccurately describes the
peer review process operated by BioMed Central's journals, and it also draws
unjustified conclusions concerning the long-term sustainability of open access
journals.
The overview of the report incorrectly states that BioMed Central does not
operate external peer review on most of its journals. In fact, all of BioMed
Central's journals operate full peer review using external peer reviewers.
Full peer review is a condition of the inclusion of articles in NIH's PubMed
Central, in which all 140+ of the journals
published by BioMed Central are archived.
The study groups BioMed Central together with Internet Scientific Publications
(ISP) as a cohort, and indicates that this was done because over half of the
responding open access journals were from these two publishers. ISP and BioMed
Central have little in common as publishers, and so the conclusions drawn
about BioMed Central by looking at this cohort are not meaningful and are
often misleading. For example, the BioMed Central/ISP group of journals is
reported to offer online manuscript submission on a lower percentage of
journals than other journal groups. The report picks up on this as a
surprising finding, suggesting implicitly that open access journals are
lagging behind in this regard. In fact, BioMed Central offers online
submission of manuscripts on every one of its journals. Not only that, but
BioMed Central's manuscript submission system is widely praised by authors,
many of whom tell us that it is the best online submission system they have
used.
ALPSP Chief Executive Sally Morris comments in her introduction to the report
that "Over 40% of the Open Access journals are not yet covering their costs
and, unlike subscription journals, there is no reason why the passage of time
- evidenced in increasing submissions, quality or impact - should actually
change that". She goes on to suggest that this calls into question the
sustainability of the open access publishing model. The suggestion that the
economics of open access journals are
unlikely to improve over time is not supported by the evidence in the report,
and runs strongly counter to BioMed Central's direct experience. According to
BioMed Central Publisher, Dr Matthew Cockerill,
"The fact that many open access journals currently operate at a loss is simply
a sign that these are early days. There is every reason to think that the
passage of time will profoundly improve the ability of open access journals to
cover their costs.
Between September 2004 and September 2005, for example, the journal BMC
Bioinformatics almost trebled the number of submissions it received. It also
increased its article processing charge during that same time period. Both
factors have helped move BioMed Central much closer to overall profitability,
and this progress is continuing."
Further evidence for a promising future for open access journals is given in
the study's findings on revenue expectations and trends. 92% of open access
journals were meeting or exceeding revenue expectations, in comparison to 91%
of AAMC journals, 83% of ALPSP journals and 76% of surveyed HighWire journals.
Similarly, the study finds that revenues from the last fiscal year to the
current fiscal year are "trending
upward" for 71% of 209 surveyed open-access journals, compared to between 27%
and 67% of subscription-based publishers that were surveyed.
Dr Cockerill continues,
"To try to determine whether an entire model is 'sustainable' based on asking
individual publishers operating in today's environment if they are making
money is to miss the wood for the trees. You have to step back and look at the
big picture. The big picture is that open access offers the research community
a far better deal than the traditional model.
Scholarly publishing is viable only because it is paid for and supported by
the research community, out of the funding (often public funding) which that
community receives. Whether a model is financially viable comes down, in the
long run, to a couple of simple questions: Can the community afford the
overall costs, and is the service provided worth the money?
In terms of open access, the answer to these questions is increasingly clear.
Wellcome is the UK's largest biomedical research charity, spending £400
million a year. The work it funds results in around 3,500 articles being
published each year. Wellcome's research predicts that the overall cost to the
science community of OA publishing will be, if anything, significantly less
than the costs of the current publishing model. If the open access model can
deliver greater access to research, at a lower cost to funders than the
existing model, then it is clearly sustainable."
ENDS
For more information or to arrange an interview, contact:
Grace Baynes, BioMed Central
Tel: +44 (0)20 7631 9988
E-mail: press@biomedcentral.com
About BioMed Central (http://www.biomedcentral.com/)
BioMed Central, part of Current Science Group, is an independent online
publishing house committed to providing open access to peer-reviewed research.
This commitment is based on the view that immediate free access to research
and the ability to freely archive and reuse published information is essential
to the rapid and efficient communication of science.
Further information
ALPSP study
'The Facts about Open Access': http://www.alpsp.org/pubs.htm
Wellcome Trust:
Report 'An Economic Analysis of Scientific Research Publishing':
http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/doc_WTD003181.html
Wellcome Trust open access policy information:
http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/doc_WTX026830.html
7-----Z39.19 NOW PUBLISHED:
from: mzeng@KENT.EDU
The final version of ANSI/NISO Z39.19-2005 has been completed and published on
the NISO website. You will find it listed on the approved and published
standards page: http://www.niso.org/standards/ or you can access it from the
direct download URL: http://www.niso.org/standards/resources/Z39-19-2005.pdf A
print version will be available for purchase in the near future.
ANSI/NISO Z39.19 - 2005 Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and
Management of Monolingual Controlled Vocabularies Equivalent international
standard: ISO 2788
Abstract: Presents guidelines and conventions for the contents, display,
construction, testing, maintenance, and management of monolingual controlled
vocabularies. It focuses on controlled vocabularies that are used for the
representation of content objects in knowledge organization systems including
lists, synonym rings, taxonomies, and thesauri.
8-----HIGHER EDUCATION RESPONDS TO CALEA ORDER
from: Edupage, 24 October 2005
The higher education community is preparing several responses to an order by
the Federal Communications Commission to extend the provisions of the
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) to Internet service
providers, including institutions of higher education, libraries, and
municipalities that provide Internet access. The order would require covered
entities to configure their networks to allow law enforcement officials--with
the authority of a court order--to tap into data streams remotely. Currently,
such taps typically require the assistance of network personnel. Making
networks compliant with the new regulations would in most cases require
significant investment in new switches and routers, and higher education
officials contend that the expense would not be justified by the number of
taps placed on their networks. By some accounts, U.S. colleges and
universities would incur costs of at least $7 billion to redesign their
networks. Those seeking an exception from CALEA for education noted that in
2003, just 12 of nearly 1,500 wiretap orders were issued for computer
networks. representatives of higher education are working on responses
including appeals, possible lawsuits, and negotiations with federal officials.
Higher education officials said that the objection is not with providing
appropriate assistance to law enforcement but that lower-cost solutions would
provide the needed capability without placing a large financial burden on
colleges and universities and their students. New York Times, 23 October 2005
(registration req'd) http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/23/technology/23college.html
9-----CONGRESS DEMANDS LIMITS ON "SENSITIVE SECUTIY INFORMATION"
from: EPIC Alert, Volume 12.20 October 6, 2005
In a conference report on the 2006 Homeland Security Appropriations Act,
Congress instructed the Department of Homeland Security to create clearer and
more consistent procedures for determining what documents are to be considered
"sensitive security information," or SSI. While such documents are
unclassified, they are still withheld as being too sensitive to release
publicly. Among the documents considered SSI are airport security plans,
specifications for screening devices, and vulnerability studies.
However, in recent years, the category has expanded to include "security
directives" and any "other information" within an agency's discretion. For
instance, Transportation Security Administration employees have cited SSI to
refuse to tell airline passengers why they were being searched.
The Congressional report sought to curb the proliferation of SSI in areas that
should be in the public domain. The report requires each office within
Homeland Security to have a specific official who will designate documents as
SSI. Congress also requires the Secretary of Homeland Security to give the
titles of all SSI documents to Congress
in an annual report.
This July, EPIC won a battle with the Department of Homeland Security and the
Transportation Security Administration over SSI designations. A federal court
found that government agencies cannot withhold information simply by
designating it SSI, without any further description. Though federal agencies
"are not required to describe the withheld portions in so much detail that it
reveals the sensitive security information itself," the court said they are
required to "provide a more adequate
description" to explain why material is not made public. EPIC filed a Freedom
of Information Act suit to force DHS, TSA and the FBI to release documents
detailing the agencies' efforts to obtain airline passenger information.
Though the court found that the FBI had conducted an adequate search for
documents, and TSA and DHS had properly withheld some material, the court
ordered DHS and TSA to provide more detailed
justification for numerous withholdings.
Excerpts from the Conference Report:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/congress/2005/dhs-ssi.html
Full text of the Conference Report on the 2006 Homeland Security Act:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?r109:1:./temp/~r109JzAsa6:e0:
Opinion in EPIC FOIA Case (pdf):
http://www.epic.org/privacy/airtravel/passengerdata/epic_v_dhs.pdf
10-----MORE HINTS POINT TO IDENTITY OF CONNECTICUT LIBRARY
from: Edupage, 07 October 2005:
The American Library Association (ALA) has filed a court brief in the ongoing
wrangling over a provision of the USA PATRIOT Act that prevents organizations
under investigation from publicly speaking about the investigation. Under the
terms of that law, federal authorities had sought information from a
Connecticut library group, which has been
forced to keep its identity secret. An article in the New York Times, though,
said the Library Connection Inc., of Windsor, Conn., is the probable target of
the investigation. According to the ALA's brief, because the Library
Connection has refused to confirm or deny the story in the Times, it is clear
that the speculation is correct.
Further, because the identity has been guessed, keeping the group from
speaking about the investigation is pointless, according to the brief. The
brief states: "If the reporting is accurate, the information the government
seeks to suppress has already been revealed, and the gag order serves no
interest but that of silencing a citizen."
Last month a judge ordered that the gag order be lifted, but an appeals court
has reimposed the gag order pending its review of the case. Chronicle of
Higher Education, 6 October 2005 (sub. req'd) http://chronicle.com/daily/2005/10/2005100601t.htm
11-----INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR OF INFORMATION SCIENCE CONFERENCES
from: Caryn Anderson <carynlanderson@YAHOO.COM>
International Calendar of Information Science Conferences: http://icisc.neasist.org/ ... includes conferences around the world (including
USA) ranging topically from librarianship to information technology.
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