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Re: mining and rights
I have myself seen (and negotiated) licenses that state *how* an
information resource is used, though not in the area of research
journals. The principle that these licenses rested upon was the
infinite divisibility of copyright. Such licenses are very common
in the reference area, especially for lexical products, which
often are licensed to search engine companies. The licenses
stipulate that the reference/lexical data could be incorporated
into the search process, but that the data could not be viewable
by a human. The search world is evolving rapidly, and whether
the inclusion of such databases continues to add value, I do not
know. IP law requires specialists, and I am not among them.
Separating "human reading" from "machine reading" may have other
implications. For one, the fair use doctrine may not apply to
robots, since there is no case to be made that a robot is a
student. As to what is the right or wrong way to view this
situation, it all depends on whether you are buying or selling.
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: "Phil Davis" <pmd8@cornell.edu>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Thursday, June 01, 2006 7:16 PM
Subject: Re: mining and rights
I've never seen a licensing agreement that states *how* an
information resource can be used. Textual analysis is use,
whether it is performed by someone doing keyword searches, or
by a machine doing sequence similarly matching. That said,
there are some unwritten rules about what constitutes *use* and
distinguishes it from *abuse*. Without understanding the
intent of the user, it is impossible to distinguish systematic
downloading for the purposes of textual analysis, from
systematic downloading for the purposes of stealing a
publisher's content. Security software cannot distinguish the
intent of data mining from stealing -- they both look like
systematic downloading, and most publishers are pretty quick to
stop this form of use. The Spider Activity Reports from
Blackwell are a good example of this.
While I think the future is wide open for new tools that enable
a researcher to perform analysis on large literature
collections, we may need to distinguish the counting of
downloads that emanate from data mining software from ordinary
human searching and browsing. A single individual using data
mining software may make COUNTER usage reports essentially
incomprehensible to a librarian.
--Phil Davis