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

      How could I be published in a book and not know about it? I had Googled my name on the web (what public digital humanist Jesse Stommel (...)

    2. ACTA up - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Indeed, these negotiations are being used to undermine the legal system of copyright in place internationally in favor of a one-way (...)

    3. A discouraging day in court for GSU - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      First, The Origin of the Species has already lost copyright protection and is in the public domain, yet science still advances.  (...)

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

      Copyright Issues and Legislation , Orphan works , Public Domain Backing into the public domain February 17, 2016 Kevin Smith, J.D.

    5. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 54 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      For example, if one searches “Rawlings” in the WATCH database one discovers the name and address of the literary trust that holds (...)

    6. Who posted all those articles to ResearchGate anyway? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      October 27, 2017 David Hansen, JD 2 Comments You may have heard about recent legal action against ResearchGate brought by several large academic (...)

    7. What makes a journal valuable? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Post navigation Previous Post By any other name? Next Post If I cite the source I am using, can it still be copyright infringement?

    8. Enough is Enough: UC Leadership and the Transformation of Scholarly Publishing - Scholarly Communica

      But interest in transformative open access models in the United States is rapidly growing. The UC System is not alone in their desire (...)

    9. Digital collections places I have and have not been - Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog

      But the entire collection, funded by the federal government, was as public as public domain gets. When the LoC took on the digitization (...)

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