It says here:
The problem first cropped up a couple years ago, noted Patricia
Schroeder,
head of the Association of American Publishers, of which the plaintiffs
are members.
"A couple years ago, we noted a drop-off in universities seeking
copyright
permission as they shifted to the digital world," Schroeder said. "Even
though technology changes, the law doesn't."
The publishers allege Georgia State University permitted its professors
to
reproduce vast amounts of copyrighted materials and combine them into
course packets for students
Comment: So did Georgia State not seek copyright permission from the
publishers? If so, why not? Does Georgia State have a policy for such
reuse requests of electronic materials?
Remeber what Schroder said: "Even though technology changes, the law
doesn't."
Ask permission and you (most likely) will receive.
On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 00:16:49 PDT, "Law Library mailing list"
<law-lib@ucdavis.edu> said:
>
> LAW-LIB Digest 4044
>
> Topics covered in this issue include:
>
> 1)
> by "David P. Dillard" <jwne@temple.edu>
> 2) Books for Postage
> by Shelley Gravel <SGravel@crrl.org>
> 3) A Law Librarian Blog Milestone
> by "Jones, Ronald \(jonesre\)" <JONESRE@ucmail.uc.edu>
> 4) Available for Postage
> by "Von Behren, Megan" <Megan.VonBehren@friedfrank.com>
> 5) For law firms with oil lawyers
> by "Yared, Michael A \"Mike\"" <myared@ida.org>
> 6) Criminal Background search question
> by "Kaskey, Sid" <SKaskey@ssd.com>
> 7) What Does KM Look Like At Your Firm?
> by "Ellen Callinan" <ellen.callinan@gmail.com>
> 8) BOOK PROPOSAL BY MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR
> by "Hill, Byron C." <BHill@bowditch.com>
> 9) job posting at the U.S. Department of Justice
> by "Oberla, Janet L" <Janet.L.Oberla@usdoj.gov>
> 10) Federal Arbitration Law
> by "Patsy A. Bourke" <PBourke@MiddReut.com>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Apr 18 2008 - 11:36:38 PDT