Hi Phoebe and all,

In my class at the School of information sciences and librarianship (Université 
de Montréal) we are doing a triple activity a little bite like the MIT 
libraries. I invite wikipedian friends on Tuesday, January 15, in my class to 
celebrate:

  *   The 18 years of Wikipedia
  *   The launch of the  # 1lib1ref campaign
  *   and the public domain day :)

From 8:30 am to 10:00 am, I will present the bases and, from 10:00 am, some 
wikipedians friends will come and say a few words about their commitment and 
help the students apply these basics during a edit-a-thon workshop. There are 
70 students.

This activity will continue in the afternoon, either at the School or in the 
libraries of UdeM - this will be decided shortly - around public domain. The 
issue of public domain is very important for Canada too this year for rather 
different, and even dramatically opposite reasons.

Last fall, under the new United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement 
(USMCA),<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States%E2%80%93Mexico%E2%80%93Canada_Agreement>
 Canada succeeded in preserving the Canadian cultural exemption but, against 
all odds, this exception now excludes the duration of the copyright terms. 
Canada will join the "life + 70" category in the same way as the United States 
and France currently - instead of the international standard of "life + 50 
years" of which Canadians had benefited under the Berne Convention which had 
governed it so far. Canada will therefore experience a freeze on the mass 
expiration of copyright for the coming two decades. The bright cortege of 
public domain works will be suspended for the next twenty years.

So in this rather sad context, we will celebrate what could be our last year of 
public domain before long, writing articles, using images and texts on 
Wikipedia and other projects. We prepare for this with an Advent Calendar for 
the public domain (https://domainepublic.savoirslibres.ca/2019/) that we 
produce all month of December through the 1st of January, Public domain Day.

Cheers !

Marie


Marie D. Martel, M.S.I, Ph.D Philosophie

Professeure adjointe
École de bibliothéconomie et sciences de l’information (EBSI)
Faculté des arts et des sciences
Université de Montréal
C.P. 6128, succ. Centre-ville, Montréal (QC) H3C 3J7

Groupe design ∩ société
www.gds.umontreal.ca<http://www.gds.umontreal.ca>


[cid:4BBDFA1F-7683-4A65-B4C9-D5C2AAF147DD]

Le 2 janv. 2019 à 16:40, phoebe ayers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> a écrit :

Hi all!
Is anyone doing anything with public domain day and Wikipedia? We are running 
an edit-a-thon on Wikipedia Day centered around 1923 books we digitized here at 
MIT libraries:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Boston/Public_Domain_Day_2019

but I am struggling with what kinds of articles to work on or activities to do.

Any ideas? Is anyone doing something similar in their libraries? I think it 
would be fun to go through the Hathitrust 1923 collection, which is now open, 
to see what would be good for Wikipedia: 
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/ls?c=149827760;a=srchls;q1=*

cheers,
Phoebe

--
* I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers <at> 
gmail.com<http://gmail.com/> *
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