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Internal institutional use (was Fair use)
Mr. Thatcher's original post in the Fair Use thread presented a
"nightmare scenario" in which authors ignored the wishes of
publishers and, under an assertion of fair use, made their
articles available to the world from their web sites or
institutional repositories. Mr. Thatcher further supposed that
the authors accepted other terms, such as "allowing unrestricted
use of the article within the author's own institution."
Similarly, the recent White Paper on the academic use of journal
content from the STM, ALPSP, and AAP/SP argued that articles
should be available for "internal institutional non-commercial
research and education purposes" (note the mention of internal).
Can someone explain to me this fascination with internal
institutional use? I assume that if an article is posted on an
open access server, either through the use of an author's
addendum or because the publisher is Green, then a certain amount
of external reproduction, distribution, and display is implicitly
authorized. Is it just commercial distribution which is
prohibited? Or would some go so far as to argue that it is not
permissible for a faculty member at Institution X to include in
her syllabus a link to an article by a colleague at another
school found on an institutional or subject repository at
Institution Y?
Peter B. Hirtle
CUL Intellectual Property Officer and
Technology Strategist
Cornell University Library
215 Olin Library
Ithaca, NY 14853-5301
pbh6@cornell.edu
t. 607.255-4033
f. 607/255-2493
http://www.copyright.cornell.edu