On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 14:27:16 +0000, Stevan Harnad <[email protected]> 
wrote:

For at least 92% of this science, no further "protection" is
necessary -- if only we would stop fussing about IPR and
focus instead on providing OA: by self-archiving at least 92%
of our articles -- *now* (without even waiting for our employers
and funders to mandate it)!

Innocent question:-

In the article cited in the original entry on this subject Paul David says:-

None of the foregoing proposals directly address the troubling possibility that 
one
day soon either the U.S., or the E.U., or both jurisdictions may have statutes
providing for both legal protection of database rights -- such as now exist 
under the
EU Directive, and criminal law sanctions reinforcing IP owners -- reliance upon
technological "self-help" -- such as now exist under the U.S. Digital Millennium
Copyright Act. Non-copyrightable and out-of-copyright material then could be
locked up indefinitely in encrypted databases. What to do about the jeopardy 
into
which that seemingly incremental, evolutionary step would place the future of 
the
entire regime of limited legal protections for intellectual property, is a 
problem that
lies beyond the scope of this paper. Conceivably, a concerted campaign to 
mitigate
the already existing threats to "open science" could contribute to public 
awareness of
those dangers, and so contribute to forestalling their materialization.

Is he right?? Is there not a risk that archives of papers will be 'locked'
under such legislation??

Is Paul's call for an information campaign not a good idea??

Bye, Barry Mahon, ICSTI

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