340 lines
20 KiB
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340 lines
20 KiB
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Current Cites
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Volume 12, no. 11, November 2001
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Edited by [2]Roy Tennant
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The Library, University of California, Berkeley, 94720
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ISSN: 1060-2356 -
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http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/CurrentCites/2001/cc01.12.11.html
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Contributors: [3]Charles W. Bailey, Jr., [4]Margaret Gross, [5]Shirl
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Kennedy, [6]Leo Robert Klein, Jim Ronningen, [7]Roy Tennant
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Ciccone, Karen, editor. [8]"Virtual Reference: Today and Tomorrow
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[9]Information Technology & Libraries 20(3) (September 2001)
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(http://www.lita.org/ital/ital2003.html). - In this theme issue of
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ITAL, the emerging field of network-based library reference service is
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covered. Most of the articles are descriptions of specific projects
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and their experiences forging new paths in providing real-time patron
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assistance remotely. In addition to case studies, one piece describes
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the different roles in digital reference transactions, and another
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identifies desired enhancements to software that supports virtual
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reference encounters. Given the very early stage in developing
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network-based reference services, this theme issue is a welcome
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addition to the growing literature on this topic. - [10]RT
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Ditlea, Steve [11]"The Electronic Paper Chase" [12]Scientific American
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285(5) (November 2001)
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(http://www.sciam.com/2001/1101issue/1101ditlea.html). - We are
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witness to a persistent dichotomy -- the vision and the reality -- in
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the diffusion of information. There is the proliferation of computing
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devices, huge propagation of digitized data, and the promise of a
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paperless society. Ironically the reality has been a veritable
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explosion of published paper, primarily because it is accessible,
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convenient and easy to use. Based on future e-paper, this is about to
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change. In presenting an overview of two competing technologies, Steve
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Diltea recounts the story of two visionaries, who for three decades,
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albeit sporadically, have been developing technologies that aim to
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replace conventional ink-on-paper with paper-like electronic displays.
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The main advantage touted, is that these devices can be erased and
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reused. The two scientists are Nicholas K. Sheridon, working at XEROX
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Palo Alto Research Park (PARC), and Joseph Jacobson of the MIT Media
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Lab. Each of these organizations has spun off startup companies,
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Gyricon Media in Palo Alto CA, and E Ink Corporation in Cambridge, MA,
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respectively. Gyrocon's process employs microscopic two-tone plastic
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beads, rotated by an electrical charge to produce either white or
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black dots onto the viewing plane, thus producing lettering.
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Jacobson's process uses transparent polymer microcapsules containing a
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blue liquid dye along with white particles. Depending on the
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electrical charge images can be produced on a white background, or
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reversed onto a dark background. Both technologies have been test
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implemented in retail establishments. The article concludes with
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several related links: Information about Electronic Reusable Paper is
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available on the Xerox PARC Web site at
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[13]www.parc.xerox.com/dhl/projects/gyricon/ - Information about
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SmartPaper is available on the Gyricon Media Web site at
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[14]www.gyriconmedia.com/smartpaper/index.asp - What Is Electronic
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Ink? Available on the E Ink Web site at [15]www.eink.com/technology/ -
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"The Last Book", Joseph Jacobson in IBM Systems Journal 36(3) (1997),
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available at [16]www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/363/jacobson.html -
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[17]MG
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Gordon, Rachel Singer. "A Course in Accidental Systems Librarianship"
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[18]Computers in Libraries 21(10) (Nov/Dec 2001): 24-28. - The first
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generation is always such an ad hoc situation. Ford got his automotive
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smarts, at least initially, while still down on the farm. The Wright
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Brothers had their bicycle shop. Afterwards, the specialization and
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degrees come but until then, trailblazers are pretty much on their
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own. There is no course of study for becoming a Systems Librarian or
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if there is, the author of this piece, a self-taught systems librarian
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from a suburban library system didn't take it. What she then imagines
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is a series of courses which highlight those characteristics of the
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job which she has found to be important. Included are plentiful
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examples, many of them delightful, from her own experience. - [19]LRK
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Guthrie, Kevin M. [20]"Archiving the Digital Age: There's a Will, But
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is There a Way?" [21]EDUCAUSE Review (November/December 2001): 56-65
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(http://www.cause.org/ir/library/pdf/erm0164.pdf). - In this article,
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the President of [22]JSTOR, the initiative to archive e-journals,
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takes on questions of persistence. As he rightly identifies,
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"archiving is not, and never has been, an issue fundamentally about
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technology; rather, it is about organizations and resources." He first
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frames the issue, then uses JSTOR's experience to illustrate some of
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the economic issues of long-term archiving. He concludes by pointing
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out that "local motivations that have been the foundation of the
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current paper archive do not naturally generate the scale of resources
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that will be required to establish the more centralized model
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necessary for the preservation of electronic documents." Nonetheless,
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he points out that since the Internet makes centralized repositories
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easily available to a wide range of institutions, such costs can be
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spread out to such a degree that they can be less expensive and more
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effective than the costs of preserving print material. - [23]RT
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Heins, Marjorie and Christina Cho. [24]Internet Filters: A Public
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Policy Report National Coalition Against Censorship (Fall 2001)
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(http://www.ncac.org/issues/internetfilters.html) - In the spring and
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summer of this year, the Free Expression Policy Project of the
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National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) rounded up all the
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studies and tests it could find that described and evaluated 19
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products or services commonly used to filter out "objectionable" Web
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content. This report, intended as a resource for both policymakers and
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the general public, summarizes and expands on what the investigators
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found -- mainly, that nearly every test "revealed massive overblocking
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by filtering software." The main problem, of course, is that the size
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and the ever-changing nature of the Web mandate heavy reliance on
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"mindless mechanical blocking" that checks for certain words and
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phrases while ignoring context. Even worse -- "Where human judgment
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does come into play, filtering decisions are based on different
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companies' broad and varying concepts of offensiveness,
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'inappropriateness' or disagreement with the political viewpoint of
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the manufacturer." The report offers some sad, scary, and downright
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humorous examples of erroneously blocked sites, e.g., "Net Nanny,
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SurfWatch, Cybersitter, and BESS, among other products, blocked House
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Majority Leader Richard 'Dick' Armey's official Website upon detecting
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the word 'dick.'" A bibliography of online and print sources is
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included, as are two appendices: (A) Blocked Sites by Subject:
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Artistic and Literary; Sexuality Education; Gay and Lesbian
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Information; Political Topics/Human Rights; Censorship; and (B)
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Blocking Categories for Different Filters Defined. - [25]SK
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Hilton, James. [26]"Copyright Assumptions and Challenges" [27]EDUCAUSE
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Review (November/December 2001): 48-55
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(http://www.cause.org/ir/library/pdf/erm0163.pdf). - In this direct,
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clearly stated piece Hilton slays some common but dead wrong
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assumptions about copyright. Perhaps the biggest of these is the myth
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that "Copyright was created primarily to protect an author's
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intellectual property." As Hilton ponits out, the United States
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Constitution clearly states that the purpose of affording a limited
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set of rights to creators is to "promote the Progress of Science and
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the useful Arts". The primary right afforded creators is a monopoly on
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their work for a limited time that began at fourteen years in early
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legislation, and has steadily increased ever since until we are now
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faced with a monopoly that extends far beyond the life of the author.
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Hilton urges academicians to use and fight for the principle of Fair
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Use as an essential component of copyright law, a cherished liberty,
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and that which underpins the academic enterprise. Without Fair Use, he
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asserts, a number of common academic practices become impossible.
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Hilton makes specific recommendations about what academic institutions
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should do to protect their rights to "promote the Progress of Science
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and the useful Arts". His call to arms comes none too soon, as in this
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"copyright war" we've already lost most of the battles. - [28]RT
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Litman, Jessica. Digital Copyright. Amherst, NY: [29]Prometheus Books,
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2001. ISBN: 1-57392-889-5. - The prospect of reading a new book on
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copyright rarely makes the pulse pound with excitement. Rather, in
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spite of the best intentions of authors, the average treatise quickly
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induces a strong desire for a nap. That's too bad. There are few
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topics of more vital importance to information professionals, and, as
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electronic information becomes the headliner in libraries rather than
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the opening act, it will be essential that we become more ardent about
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copyright. If not, the halcyon days of ownership and fair use
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(whatever they were) will fade in the twilight, and, in their place,
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will be the bright new days of negotiated access rights and content in
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encrypted digital "lockboxes" (where have I heard that before?). We'll
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ask questions (Can I view it? Can I store it? Can I print it? Can I
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quote it? How much of it? How long can I do it?) and get answers that
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depend on how fat our wallets are. We'll be amazed at how many
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licensing permutations there can be when publishers can truly control
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access to every byte. Reading Litman's book could help stave off
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information dystopia. With chapters such as "Copyright Lawyers Set Out
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to Colonize Cyberspace" and "Just Say Yes to Licensing!," it's clear
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that this book is more lively and readable than the typical tome.
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Rather than just reciting facts, Litman tries to give the reader a
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feel for the dynamics of copyright politics and the motivations behind
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the whole crazy mess. And, as you might infer from the chapter titles,
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she definitely has a point of view. Quick, read it while it's still in
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print format. - [30]CB
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[31]"The New Rules of Engagement" themed issue, [32]Wired 9(12)
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(December 2001) (http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/9.12/). - Before
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we get to the meat of this review, a lesson from art history class: in
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tracking cultural changes, watch for the transition from a classical
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to a mannerist style. The former is characterized by a need for
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expression of new ideas finding an effective medium for doing so,
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resulting in works which capture the zeitgeist, while the latter is
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characterized by imitation (executing "in the manner of") which adds
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nothing to, even dilutes, the classical period's accomplishments. This
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kind of change has been happening to Wired, which is turning from a
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unique window on a new world into a kind of style guide: buy this
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stuff and repeat these buzzwords and you can live the Wired life. (I
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propose that the transformation be completed by selling the mag to
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that absolute dictator for lifestyle, Martha Stewart. She recently
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announced that she's going to come out with her own single issue on
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the subject of high tech in the home, so if the response is good this
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could be a branding match made in heaven. Martha Stewart Wired
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Living!) That off my chest, I recommend looking at the December Wired
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if you have a morbid fascination with how info tech publications are
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exploiting our post-Sept. 11 paranoia. Let's face it -- geeks and
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wannabe geeks get a technothrill from topics like surveillance, netwar
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and swarming theory, and can nod knowingly as easy targets like
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cumbersome military apparatus are shot down in print. This issue is
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such a mix of yellow journalism, unworkable schemes and recycled
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notions which long-time Wired readers will recognize, that I'm loathe
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to admit that there are also some intriguing ideas. That, and the fact
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that the mag still has a relatively large readership to influence,
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makes it worth watching, warily. - JR
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Olsen, Florence. [33]"Colleges Experiment With Routing On-Campus Phone
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Calls Over the Internet" [34]The Chronicle of Higher Education
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(October 23, 2001)
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(http://www.chronicle.com/free/2001/10/2001102301t.htm) - Using the
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Internet to make phone calls, aka IP telephony, has long been one of
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those "sounds great, works lousy" ideas. It may, however, be finally
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coming into its own. One example discussed in this article is what
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happened after students at Columbia University tried to call friends
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and family in the wake of the September terrorist attacks, but were
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unable to get through because Manhattan's telephone system was
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"overwhelmed." Within hours of the attack, network specialists in the
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university's School of Engineering and Applied Science, managed to set
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up a conference room where students could make calls -- both
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nationally and internationally -- over the Internet. "Specialized
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telephones had been hastily configured to route outbound calls through
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several Internet gateways to the public telephone network." Other
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academic institutions are sticking their toes into the waters of IP
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telephony; some, in fact, are diving in headfirst. The article goes on
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to describe the ins and outs of campuswide IP phone networks,
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advantages and disadvantages, and potential cost savings. - [35]SK
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SANS Institute. [36]The Twenty Most Critical Internet Security
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Vulnerabilities (Updated): The Experts' Consensus (November 15, 2001)
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Version 2.501 (http://www.sans.org/top20.htm) - If you had even the
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slightest doubt that the Internet is becoming more, not less, like the
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Wild West, consider that last year's version of this document was
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called "The Ten Most Critical Internet Security Vulnerabilities." At
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the top of this year's list? "Default installs of operating systems
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and applications." Why? Because hackers/crackers are well aware of all
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the unpatched services, open ports, etc. Also included are foibles
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such as bad passwords, incomplete or non-existent backups, logging and
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address filtering failures, vulnerable code (e.g., CGI), buffer
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overflows, and unpatched Swiss Cheese Microsoft products. The
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document, compiled in conjunction with the FBI's National
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Infrastructure Protection Center, is valuable because "the majority of
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successful attacks on computer systems via the Internet can be traced
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to exploitation of security flaws on this list." Note that this is a
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"living document" that "includes step-by-step instructions and
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pointers to additional information useful for correcting the flaws."
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The document is updated and expanded as new information becomes
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available. - [37]SK
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Schnapp, Marilyn. [38]"Are Tech Book Sales a Leading Economic
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Indicator?" [39]O' Reilly Network (November 16, 2001)
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(http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/webservices/2001/11/16/indicator.html
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) - The short answer is yes, according to this author, who ran
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O'Reilly's research department in 2000-2001. She compared "sales
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trends of some of O'Reilly & Associates' technical books with other
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economic indicators, including the NASDAQ index." The article includes
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some intriguing charts and graphs which illustrate, for example, that
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sales of O'Reilly tech books at Amazon.com closely track the level of
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the NASDAQ, and that sales of O'Reilly Linux titles at Barnes & Noble
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rise and fall almost in tandum with the price of Red Hat stock. As Hal
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Varian -- Dean of the School of Information Management and Systems,
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University of California, Berkeley -- explains, "(T)he belief that IT
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was going to be a very profitable investment...drove investor behavior
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in the stock market and knowledge workers' investment in technical
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books." The findings discussed in this article, says the author,
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"suggests that segmenting book sales data along economic sectors might
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be useful in gauging future economic downturns of other sectors of the
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economy." - [40]SK
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Simons, Barbara. "Viewpoint: The ACM Declaration in Felten v. RIAA".
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[41]Communications of the ACM 44(10) (Oct. 2001): 23-26. - This is the
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FAQ explaining ACM's decision to submit a declaration in support of
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the litigants in the Felten case. Questions are asked and answered in
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a sober manner and range from background information to what ACM hopes
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to achieve through its action. At the very least, one suspects, ACM is
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out to avoid the nightmare scenario where, in the words of this
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article, it will need to "hire attorneys to review conference and
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journal submissions that could possibly be in violation of the
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anticircumvention provisions of the DMCA." [42]Text of the declaration
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itself can found at the ACM site at
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http://www.acm.org/usacm/copyright/felten_declaration.html. [Addendum:
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CNET reports that the judge has dismissed the case. The judge's ruling
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is not yet available.
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(http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-8010671.html)] - [43]LRK
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_________________________________________________________________
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Current Cites 12(11) (November 2001) ISSN: 1060-2356
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Copyright <20> 2001 by the Regents of the University of California All
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rights reserved.
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Copying is permitted for noncommercial use by computerized bulletin
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board/conference systems, individual scholars, and libraries.
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Libraries are authorized to add the journal to their collections at no
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cost. This message must appear on copied material. All commercial use
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requires permission from the editor. All product names are trademarks
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or registered trade marks of their respective holders. Mention of a
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product in this publication does not necessarily imply endorsement of
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the product. To subscribe to the Current Cites distribution list, send
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the message "sub cites [your name]" to
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[44]listserv@library.berkeley.edu, replacing "[your name]" with your
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name. To unsubscribe, send the message "unsub cites" to the same
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address.
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References
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1. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/imagemap/cc
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2. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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3. http://info.lib.uh.edu/cwb/bailey.htm
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4. http://www.cam.org/~mgross/mgross.htm
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5. http://web.tampabay.rr.com/hooboy/
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6. http://leoklein.com/
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7. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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8. http://www.lita.org/ital/ital2003.html
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9. http://www.lita.org/ital/index.htm
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10. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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11. http://www.sciam.com/2001/1101issue/1101ditlea.html
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12. http://www.sciam.com/
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13. http://www.parc.xerox.com/dhl/projects/gyricon/
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14. http://www.gyriconmedia.com/smartpaper/index.asp
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15. http://www.eink.com/technology/
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16. http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/363/jacobson.html
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17. http://www.cam.org/~mgross/mgross.htm
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18. http://www.infotoday.com/cilmag/ciltop.htm
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19. http://leoklein.com/
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20. http://www.cause.org/ir/library/pdf/erm0164.pdf
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21. http://www.cause.org/pub/er/erm.html
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22. http://www.jstor.org/
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23. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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24. http://www.ncac.org/issues/internetfilters.html
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25. http://web.tampabay.rr.com/hooboy/
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26. http://www.cause.org/ir/library/pdf/erm0163.pdf
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27. http://www.cause.org/pub/er/erm.html
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28. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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29. http://www.prometheusbooks.com/site/index.html
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30. http://info.lib.uh.edu/cwb/bailey.htm
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31. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/9.12/
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32. http://www.wired.com/wired/
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33. http://www.chronicle.com/free/2001/10/2001102301t.htm
|
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34. http://www.chronicle.com/
|
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35. http://web.tampabay.rr.com/hooboy/
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36. http://www.sans.org/top20.htm
|
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37. http://web.tampabay.rr.com/hooboy/
|
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38. http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/webservices/2001/11/16/indicator.html
|
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39. http://www.oreillynet.com/
|
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40. http://web.tampabay.rr.com/hooboy/
|
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41. http://www.acm.org/cacm/
|
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42. http://www.acm.org/usacm/copyright/felten_declaration.html
|
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43. http://leoklein.com/
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44. mailto:listserv@library.berkeley.edu
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