This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in academic libraries. We begin by distinguishing four facets of privacy and intellectual freedom based on the LIS and philosophical literature. Next, we perform a content analysis of 42 license agreements for electronic journals, focusing on terms for enforcing authorized use and collection and sharing of user data. We compare our findings to model licenses, to recommendations proposed in a recent treatise on licenses, and to our account of the four facets of intellectual freedom. We find important conflicts with each
With the introduction of license agreements, there is no more ownership of the electronic resources,...
We often regulate actors as a proxy for protecting categories of information. Rather than directly p...
For nearly three centuries following the enactment of the world’s first modern copyright statute, ne...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
Open AccessInformation Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electr...
Information Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electronic publis...
This paper explored the degree to use terms proposed by model licenses have become institutionalized...
While electronic publications can greatly increase a university community?s access to information, t...
Licensing has been a predominate means of governing the transfer of electronic journal content betwe...
This paper describes the results of a study to compare contemporary e-journal licenses from two rese...
Every year academic libraries spend millions of dollars to provide their users access to copyrighted...
This paper explored the degree to which use terms proposed by model licenses have become institution...
A perpetual access right to an electronic journal, defined as the right to permanently access licens...
For libraries, the shift from ownership of printed works to access of electronic works has required ...
In this paper we investigate the definitions of perpetual access and examine current studies on the ...
With the introduction of license agreements, there is no more ownership of the electronic resources,...
We often regulate actors as a proxy for protecting categories of information. Rather than directly p...
For nearly three centuries following the enactment of the world’s first modern copyright statute, ne...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
Open AccessInformation Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electr...
Information Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electronic publis...
This paper explored the degree to use terms proposed by model licenses have become institutionalized...
While electronic publications can greatly increase a university community?s access to information, t...
Licensing has been a predominate means of governing the transfer of electronic journal content betwe...
This paper describes the results of a study to compare contemporary e-journal licenses from two rese...
Every year academic libraries spend millions of dollars to provide their users access to copyrighted...
This paper explored the degree to which use terms proposed by model licenses have become institution...
A perpetual access right to an electronic journal, defined as the right to permanently access licens...
For libraries, the shift from ownership of printed works to access of electronic works has required ...
In this paper we investigate the definitions of perpetual access and examine current studies on the ...
With the introduction of license agreements, there is no more ownership of the electronic resources,...
We often regulate actors as a proxy for protecting categories of information. Rather than directly p...
For nearly three centuries following the enactment of the world’s first modern copyright statute, ne...