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    1. Tackling the Law of Text and Data Mining for Computational Research - Duke University Libraries Blog

      Thankfully, there is a legal pathway forward for TDM researchers.  Unlike the situation in most other nations, where text and (...)

    2. Sailing to Byzantium - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      So much policy on this topic in US libraries is based on specific provisions in our copyright law, whether fair use, section 108 for (...)

    3. Return of the 4th Circuit Records & Briefs

      Board of Education had invalidated the "separate but equal" doctrine nearly a decade earlier, this ruling was considered applicable (...)

    4. Fair Use on NPR - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      A recent NPR story highlighted fair use as an important exception to the exclusive rights of copyright holders and discussed the Stanford Fair (...)

    5. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 9 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly c

      May 10, 2014 Kevin Smith, J.D. 2 Comments This past week there have been a lot of angry blog posts about the new “Connected Casebook” plan from (...)

    6. The Goodson Blogson

      Launched in 2016 with the financial backing of online legal research company Ravel Law (now owned by LexisNexis ), the Caselaw Access (...)

    7. Belly Up to the Bar Journals

      Want to see Richard Nixon’s 1936 student note, “Application of the Inherent Danger Doctrine to Servants of Negligent Independent (...)

    8. Its the content, not the version! - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Throughout this discussion, the proponents of the position that copyright is transferred only in a final version really do not make any (...)

    9. Who do you work for, faculty author? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      As to why OUP would do this, I think there are a couple of legal benefits for authors that OUP hopes to avoid having their contributors (...)

    10. Streaming video case dismissed - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The two major reasons for the decision were sovereign immunity — the doctrine that state entities can seldom be sued in federal court — (...)

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