Actually, licenses with the vendor for the electronic journal generally determine if you can use it
for ILL. This is in addition to Copyright restrictions that apply for articles in any format.
Copyright may allow it, through Fair Use or paying CCC fees, but if the license does not, then you
Don't be dismissive so fast. You may go back and do your homework.
Check with your Counsel or literature. What's happening here is a work
around LEGAL realities.
Karim Boughjida
Twitter: @kboughida
kbough...@gmail.com
kbough...@library.gwu.edu
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 7:22 PM, Andrew Shuping
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 7:06 AM, karim boughida kbough...@gmail.com wrote:
Don't be dismissive so fast. You may go back and do your homework. Check
with your Counsel or literature. What's happening here is a work
around LEGAL realities.
[I am not a lawyer.]
It's always a good idea to check
How do you request digital format for a pdf interlibrary loan journal
article where a digital format is available for the article?... not the
image format if available in digital. Guidelines for interlibrary loan
practices need to distinguish digital pdf from image pdf where journal
articles are
What do you mean by digital format exactly?
Andrew Shuping
Emerging Technologies/Interlibrary Loan Library
Jack Tarver Library, Mercer University
Robert Frost - In three words I can sum up everything I've learned
about life: it goes on.
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 4:18 PM, don warner saklad
Sounds like he wants to request a searchable PDF as opposed to one
composed of only images.
--jody
What do you mean by digital format exactly?
Andrew Shuping
Emerging Technologies/Interlibrary Loan Library
Jack Tarver Library, Mercer University
Robert Frost - In three words I can sum up
It depends on the license agreement between the publisher and the
lending library. Many publishers do not allow library ILL to simply
download the PDF directly from their journal article page and send it
to the requestor. A lot of publishers allow the lending library to
download and print the
Ranti is correct in what she says about publishers. As an ILL person
it drives me nuts that there are so many loopholes just to be able to
send stuff from our databases via ILL. Some of them say you can but
you have to download it, print it, and then scan it again. It isn't
the ILL practices
It seems that it is also related to copyright restrictions and general
counsel interpretations. If you print and re-scan. You're safer.
photocopy rules apply and not electronic copy.
Don't ask me more. I'm not a lawyer.
Karim Boughida
Twitter:kboughida
kbough...@gmail.com
Copyright rules would apply regardless of format and general counsel
interpretations wouldn't really apply to this scenario.
Andrew Shuping
Robert Frost - In three words I can sum up everything I've learned
about life: it goes on.
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 7:17 PM, karim boughida
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