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    1. Publishing ironies - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      I suspect that the price of the Collected Works set is high, and the publisher is quite obscure (a colleague here just shrugged when I mentioned (...)

    2. The Goodson Blogson

      (These older compositions were already in the public domain, but the indi... Share Get link Facebook X Pinterest Email Other Apps Read (...)

    3. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 12 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      (p. 8) In the context of this confusion, it is all the more laudable that some groups are making continuing contributions to the public (...)

    4. Who pays for copyright enforcement? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The doctrine illustrates a default rule of our legal system—that owners of private property should pay to police and enforce their own (...)

    5. Using copyright for its intended purpose - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Such a bill, which would kill innovation in the name of protectionism, may be unconstitutional .

    6. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 58 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      Sometimes the packaging of the product will indicate the presence of a DRM system, such as when the name Macrovision is (...)

    7. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 26 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      This severe restraint on the benefits that Public Domain Day ought to bestow on us are nicely explained by Duke’s Center for the Study (...)

    8. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 31 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      That system embodies a unique set of practices, values and incentives that are quite different from those ensconced in our traditional (...)

    9. Creative Commons and credit - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Attribution — the right of the creator to have his or her name associated with the work — is the most basic of these moral rights. 

    10. Tweets and Metadata Unite!: Meet the Twitter Card - Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog

      Examples in Twitter’s documentation use @name, while Open Graph examples use @property. Interestingly, this mix didn’t break anything.

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