319 lines
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319 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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[1]Current Cites (Digital Library SunSITE)
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Volume 11, no. 9, September 2000
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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/2000/cc00.11.9.html
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Contributors: [3]Terry Huwe, [4]Michael Levy, [5]Leslie Myrick , Jim
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Ronningen, Lisa Rowlison, [6]Roy Tennant
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Abreu, Elinor. [7]"Diving into the Deep Web" [8]The Standard
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(September 4, 2000)
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(http://www.thestandard.com/article/display/0,1151,18134,00.html). -
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In a brief overview of a couple of companies Abreu brings to light an
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issue that librarians have worried about for a number of years -- how
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to locate information that is contained deep within web-based
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databases. Most search engines will not search within databases, or as
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Abreu calls it, "the deep Web." A recent survey suggests that there
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may be 550 billion documents in the deep web. Now there are a number
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of companies developing products that will search multiple databases
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on the web, especially because the cost of indexing has been falling.
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- [9]ML
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Borgman, Christine L. [10]"The Premise and Promise of a Global
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Information Infrastructure" [11]First Monday 5(8) (August 7, 2000)
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(http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue5_8/borgman/). - Borgman
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assesses the rapid growth of worldwide networking capabilities, and
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analyzes the interplay between the technology and the political forces
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that govern the introduction of technology. She argues that the
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premise of universal networking is rational, and the promise is
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exciting, because a genuine opportunity does exist to push technology
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to the places where it is needed the most. The two most likely
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pathways for the emergence of a ubiquitous network are evolutionary,
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and revolutionary. However, sustained growth in the information
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infrastructure does not necessarily yield new absolutes that will spur
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the growth of a utopian society. Borgman argues convincingly that
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existing political systems and cultural beliefs will have the greatest
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influence on the actual penetration of an information infrastructure
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throughout the world. - [12]TH
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Crawford, Walt. "Nine Models, One Name: Untangling the E-book Muddle"
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[13]American Libraries (September 2000): 56-59. - With all the hype
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about device-dependent e-books like the Rocket eBook and the SoftBook
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reader (now both owned by the Gemstar International Group), it's easy
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to forget that: a) e-books are not new, and b) there are a number of
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other e-book publication models. Both of these points are ably
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presented by Crawford in an easy to understand overview of e-book
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choices. Crawford readily admits to not having an answer to the
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question of which model will be important to libraries, but then who
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does? Follow this piece with the Donald Hawkins article cited in this
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month's issue of Current Cites. - [14]RT
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Dodds, Leigh. [15]"Instant RDF?" in [16]<xml.com> (August 30, 2000)
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(http://www.xml.com/pub/2000/08/30/instantrdf/) and Dumbill, Edd,
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[17]"Putting RDF to Work," in [18]<xml.com> (August 9, 2000)
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(http://www.xml.com/pub/2000/08/09/rdfdb/). The [19]Resource
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Description Framework (RDF, http://www.w3.org/RDF/), a mechanism for
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processing metadata (or data about data), is intended to provide
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interoperability for the exchange of machine-understandable metadata
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for online resources, whether they be text, data, image, video or
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audio files. Intelligent agents will harvest this information, which
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can then be used in resource discovery, description, and cataloguing.
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The hope is that with a standard system of resource description, a
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uniform query language will be able to perform structured queries over
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the entirety of the web. Two recent articles on RDF (the Resource
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Description Framework) in <xml.com> offer a more technical and
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behind-the-scenes slant on the standard as it evolves, covering how
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RDF will be generated, stored, culled, and processed: from
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controversies brewing on special-interest lists over the proposed data
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model and serialization syntax, to an explanation of the
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unsavory-sounding process known as "screen-scraping", to an intro to
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[20]R.V. Guha's RDFDB (http://web1.guha.com/rdfdb/), a relational
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database application for RDF that roll-up-your-sleeves types can try
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at home. Dumbill offers a practical application for a kind of
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integrative RDF Store that would cross-reference all the data on your
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PC: websites, documents, scheduling apps and email. By querying an RDF
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database for data connections on your PC you could conceivably search
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on and collect all the applicable documents and emails from that
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visiting dignitary/important client/job candidate you're meeting at
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3:00 today, and before she arrives, check out her homepage! - [21]LM
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"The Future of Books" CQ Researcher 10(24) (June 23 2000):545-568. - A
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collection of short articles that outline the major parameters
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surrounding the issue of electronic books. Included is a historical
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discussion of the development of printing, the business of publishing
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and recent trends in electronic publishing. Along with the articles
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are a number of useful sidebars containing statistics, as well as a
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brief bibliography. While the articles would not contain anything new
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for someone who has been following the issues it is an
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easily-accessible starting point for the neophyte interested in the
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debate surrounding e-books and the digital revolution. - ML
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Hawkins, Donald T. "Electronic Books: a Major Publishing Revolution.
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Part 1: General Considerations and Issues" [22]Online 24(4)
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(July/August 2000):14-28. - Few subjects freak out people who love
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books like this one does. Read the article and then recommend it to
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anybody who needs to calm down and get a grip, because it's a
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realistic and comprehensive view of current e-book publishing which
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makes it clear that the phenomenon is a new set of alternatives and
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not a plague. Hawkins provides a primer on the nature of e-books and
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the technology available for displaying them, the factors which stop
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most people from reading long works on a screen, problems publishers
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are grappling with, and how libraries are dealing with the issue. The
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thoroughness here is impressive, references are documented and the
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lists of URLs and articles for further reading are extensive. There
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will be a second part published in the September Online with the focus
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on the players in this market. - JR
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Madeiros, Norm. [23]"XML and the Resource Description Framework: The
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Great Web Hope" [24]Online (September 2000)
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(http://www.onlineinc.com/onlinemag/OL2000/medeiros9.html). - Norm
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Madeiros makes explicit one librarian's hope for this massive Library
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of Babel we call the web: that through a standardized metadata
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framework called the Resource Description Framework (RDF), finding
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resources on the web might someday be as easy as accessing resources
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in the library using your friendly local OPAC. Libraries have been the
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originators and purveyors par excellence of metadata, from the red
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ribbon rubrics which announced the contents of scrolls in the Library
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of Alexandria to modern MARC records which form the backbone for
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various OPAC systems that guide library patrons to the shelf or
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electronic file containing the resource they seek. Evoking the W3C
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[25]RDF Model and Syntax Specification's call
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(http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax/) for a "Web of Trust" built on
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the twin pillars of the RDF standard and Digital Signatures, Madeiros
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traces the sad history of the prostitution of <META> tags by
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(especially e-commerce) content providers, and looks askance at the
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"popularity-contest" model of web-indexing and ranking used by search
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engines like Google. The solution may come with the adoption of RDF:
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an objective, descriptive, machine-understandable standard. For those
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new to RDF (i.e. those who involuntarily raise their eyebrows at the
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mention of "screen-scraping") Madeiros appends a couple of handy
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cut-&-paste models; the abbreviated syntax, which I excerpt here,
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works with HTML, linking to it as you would to a stylesheet, with
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<LINK>:
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<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
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xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.0/">
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<rdf:Description rdf:about="http://doc"
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dc:creator="your name here"
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dc:title="your document"
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dc:description="what it is"
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dc:date="2000-09-10" />
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</rdf:RDF>
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- [26]LM
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Melamut, Steven J. [27]"Pursuing Fair Use, Law Libraries and
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Electronic Reserves" Law Library Journal 92(2) (Spring 2000):157-192
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(http://www.aallnet.org/products/2000-16.pdf). - Melamut takes the
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reader through an extensive overview of the leading cases and legal
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developments that face libraries which provide a formal electronic
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reserve collection. He discusses the copyright issues in traditional
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reserves spending much time on the so-called Classroom Guidelines that
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are part of the legislative history of the 1976 Copyright Act and the
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applicable fair use sections of the Act. While there hasn't been any
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litigation regarding electronic reserves there are a number of
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significant cases concerning the creation of coursepacks and these
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give some indication of the legal landscape that may be applicable to
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the area of course reserves. Melamut suggests that libraries will now
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have to address the issue of the payment of permission fees given the
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fact that the technology makes it much easier to monitor the use of
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protected materials and that schools may be liable for copyright
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infringement for material from an e-reserve collection. - [28]ML
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Sholtz, Paul. [29]"Economics of Personal Information Exchange"
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[30]First Monday 5(9) (September 4, 2000)
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(http://www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue5_9/sholtz/). - Sholtz argues
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that personal information has become the new currency of online
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commerce. However, recent figures indicate that between 75 and 90
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million Americans regularly use the Internet, but they rarely pay for
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the content they see. These users appear to be comfortable offering
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personal information in exchange for free services and information. As
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this "economy" develops, large "libraries" of personal data are being
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accumulated, bought and sold. This article explores some of the
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connotations of e-commerce, which so far has relied upon moving
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conventional business practices to the Web. Sholtz see an emerging
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opportunity for vendors who can grasp how "communities" of customers
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can be approached in ways that protect privacy but offer online
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advantages. - [31]TH
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Sitts, Maxine K., editor. [32]Handbook for Digital Projects: A
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Management Tool for Preservation and Access Andover, MA: Northeast
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Document Conservation Center, 2000 (http://www.nedcc.org/dighand.htm).
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- [33]The School for Scanning is a long-running and well-respected
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workshop on digitization for libraries, archives, and museums. Offered
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about once a year, the workshop usually attracts more than 300
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attendees who leave the three-day session reeling under the load of
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more information than they could possibly absorb, presented by leaders
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in the field. Now this book documents some of the most important
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information the workshop has to offer, to the benefit of both those
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who attended the workshop and those who couldn't. With this hard-bound
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volume and the Kenney/Reiger work "Moving Theory Into Practice" (see
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the [34]Current Cites review), those tackling digitization projects
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will be well-equipped indeed. - [35]RT
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Smith, Barbara H. "To Filter or not to Filter: The Role of the Public
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Library in Determining Internet Access" Communication Law and Policy
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5(3) (Summer 2000):385-421. - As a starting point Smith discusses
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society's assumptions about the need to protect children from
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undesirable materials. She makes the point that the view of the child
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and harm has changed over the centuries resulting in a bourgeois view
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that aims to prolong the child's innocence for as long as possible.
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Building on this analysis the author outlines various theories of the
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first amendment and discusses a number of cases involving schools,
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libraries and protection of minors. In particular, she highlights the
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only filtering case to date, that of Mainstream Loudon v Board of
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Trustees of Loudon County, which held that the public library could
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not subject adults to the "electronic equivalent of a children's
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reading room." In addition, there have been a number of attempts over
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the last few years to introduce statutory law regulating Internet
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content. In the discussion of the issues surrounding filtering Smith
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suggests a three pronged solution to the problem: the introduction of
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privacy walls and screens so that other patrons would not
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inadvertently view materials they find offensive; separate children
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and adult computers with some filtering on the children's computers;
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and finally allowing parents to decide whether their children should
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be allowed to use unfiltered computers. Not everyone will agree with
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Smith's solutions, and it seems that there could be strong objections
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to parents blocking the types of materials their children --
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especially teenagers -- can access in the public library. However,
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this article clearly articulates the major arguments in the filtering
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debate and is useful in this role alone. - [36]ML
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Stratford, Jean Slemmons and Juri. "Computerized and Networked
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Government Information" [37]Journal of Government Information 27(3)
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(May/June 2000): 385-389. - The column, written by this couple from
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U.C. Davis, focuses in this issue on government services via the
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Internet. It's a little mystifying why the authors state that the
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focus is on international topics when most of the examples given are
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domestic. Regardless, this is a nice sampling of efforts made by
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governmental and intergovernmental groups to provide interactive
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services over the net. For me, the richest trove came from their
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description of the federal report [38]"Integrated Service Delivery:
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Governments Using Technology to Serve Citizens"
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(http://policyworks.gov/org/main/mg/intergov/isdtitp.html) because it
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led me to poke around at the root [39]policyworks.gov. This is the
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home page for the General Services Administration's Office of
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Governmentwide Policy, which has lots of links relating to aspects of
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federal information policy, the most pertinent being the one for the
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Office of Information Technology's [40]"IT Policy On-Ramp"
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(http://www.itpolicy.gsa.gov/). Besides the feds, the authors describe
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projects by the G8 countries, National Governors' Association and
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state and local agencies. - JR
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_________________________________________________________________
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Current Cites 11(9) (September 2000) ISSN: 1060-2356
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Copyright <20> 2000 by the Library, University of California, Berkeley.
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All 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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[41]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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[42]Copyright <20> 2000 UC Regents. All rights reserved.
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Document maintained at
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http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/CurrentCites/2000/cc00.11.9.html by
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[43]Roy Tennant.
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Last update September 26, 2000. SunSITE Manager:
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[44]manager@sunsite.berkeley.edu
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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://www.lib.berkeley.edu/autobiography/thuwe/
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4. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/staff/levy/
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5. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/~scanmgr/LESLIE/citescv.html
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6. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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7. http://www.thestandard.com/article/display/0,1151,18134,00.html
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8. http://www.thestandard.com/
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9. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/staff/levy/
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10. http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue5_8/borgman/
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11. http://www.firstmonday.org/
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13. http://www.ala.org/alonline/
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14. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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15. http://www.xml.com/pub/2000/08/30/instantrdf/
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16. http://www.xml.com/
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17. http://www.xml.com/pub/2000/08/09/rdfdb/
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18. http://www.xml.com/
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19. http://www.w3.org/RDF/
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20. http://web1.guha.com/rdfdb/
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21. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/~scanmgr/LESLIE/citescv.html
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22. http://www.onlineinc.com/onlinemag/
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23. http://www.onlineinc.com/onlinemag/OL2000/medeiros9.html
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24. http://www.onlineinc.com/onlinemag/
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25. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax/
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26. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/~scanmgr/LESLIE/citescv.html
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27. http://www.aallnet.org/products/2000-16.pdf
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28. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/staff/levy/
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29. http://www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue5_9/sholtz/
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30. http://www.firstmonday.org/
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31. http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/autobiography/thuwe/
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32. http://www.nedcc.org/dighand.htm
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33. http://www.nedcc.org/sfsinfo.htm
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34. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/CurrentCites/bibondemand.cgi?title=Moving+Theory+Into+Practice&query=moving+theory+into+practice
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39. http://policyworks.gov/
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40. http://www.itpolicy.gsa.gov/
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41. mailto:listserv@library.berkeley.edu
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42. http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Admin/copyright.html
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43. http://escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/
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44. mailto:manager@sunsite.berkeley.edu
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