Hi Eric,
Questions like these can be initially easily addressed by looking at the terms 
of your employment and how that falls under your university's Intellectual 
Property policies.  For Notre Dame, 5.7 
https://policy.nd.edu/assets/203061/intellectualpropertypolicy.pdf  is your 
policy.  If you are a full-time employee and you are performing the work in the 
digital scholarship center as part of your job, then ND is the copyright holder 
of the work you are performing, even if it is creative or a derivative work.  
You may be able to have attribution of your contribution associated with the 
product but you should clear that.  It's a good question for your VP for 
Research who approves the Policy 5.7.

Kari

Kari R. Smith
Digital Archivist and Program Head for Born-digital Archives
Institute Archives and Special Collections
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries, Cambridge, Massachusetts
617.253.5690   smithkr at mit.edu   http://libraries.mit.edu/archives/  
@karirene69

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric 
Lease Morgan
Sent: Wednesday, May 03, 2017 12:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CODE4LIB] memorandums of understanding, copyrights, & acknowledgements

To what degree do any of you enter into memorandums of understanding between 
yourselves and the people for whom you provide services? Similarly, are the 
products of your services copyrighted, and if so, then by whom? And finally, if 
you provide services to your constituents, then to what degree do you require 
copyright statements and/or acknowledgements?

I work in a digital scholarship center with a number of other people. [1] As a 
group, we provide sets of different value-added services to students, faculty, 
and staff. These value-added services go beyond the packaging and re-packaging 
of data/information. Instead, our services are analysis against content. We 
evaluate data given to us and answer questions like: what trends can be gleaned 
from this data, what are the anomalies, when & where did given events occur, 
what are some of the possible reasons why, etc. In this way, we act more akin 
to “special librarians” where we essentially "give them the fish as opposed to 
teaching them to fish." These value added services often manifest themselves in 
the forms of software systems/scripts, indexes, datasets, as well as 
charts/graphs. Many of our constituents are humanities and social sciences 
scholars. As such and in general, they do possess the skills necessary to some 
of our text mining, GIS, and statistical analysis. Additionally and unlike the 
hard scientists, they often work in very very small groups of single 
individuals; co-authorship is uncommon.

The center’s services are free, as in free beer. But the services represent 
real scholarly effort. As such there is a desire to make explicit our 
contributions. Such is part of the academic tradition. After all, our 
intellectual capital is all we have. To resolve some of these issues, or to 
bring them to the fore, there is some desire to enter into memorandums of 
understanding — a sort of contract outlining different party’s roles & 
responsibilities. There is some desire to add copyright attribution statements 
to charts & graphs. There is some desire to ensure, at the very least, 
acknowledgements in articles & presentations. Heck, if we were to go the whole 
nine yards, then there are also desires to have the whole kits & caboodles 
deposited into local repositories. 

On the other hand, much of this flies in the face to traditional librarianship, 
and after all, library services have always been free, and if we require 
memorandums, copyright statements, and/or acknowledgements, then the scholars 
may simply do without.

How might some of y’all be dealing with these changing roles in your libraries?

[1] center - http://library.nd.edu/cds/

—
Eric Lease Morgan, Digital Initiatives Librarian Hesburgh Libraries University 
of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556

[email protected]
574/631-8604

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