The Free Online Scholarship (FOS) Newsletter
      September 14, 2001
Please let all of you and yours be alive and safe.
There are certain images from Tuesday that I will never get out of my 
head.  Sometimes they derail all productive thought, and sometimes they 
energize.  This issue of the newsletter arose from the spells of energy in 
between the spells of numbness.  I'd like to say that I got back to work to 
avoid giving the attackers the victory of stopping me, but in fact this 
issue is much more like a twitch, a product of involuntary energy.  It's 
here when you're ready, but I don't expect anyone to be ready.
Working for free online scholarship can support open societies that will 
not threaten others even if they are intrinsically open to attack by 
others.  But unfortunately the connection is remote and indirect (more 
below).  So getting back to work for us does little to prevent future 
attacks or help the victims of this one.  We should take care of first 
things first, but then we should get back to work.  The consolation is that 
when life returns to normal, it will be enriched by what we do, and doing 
it despite the strife around us is a way of making peace.
If you need help finding a friend or relative, you've probably already 
turned to the kinds of help that are available.  If you aren't sure what's 
available, here are two good lists:
http://www.researchbuzz.com/911.html
http://websearch.about.com/library/searchtips/bltotd010911.htm
The best source of post-attack news I've seen is a blog set up by 
SiliconValley.com.  (Hit Refresh on your browser every hour or so to get 
the newest postings.)
http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/special/attack/blog.html
There are lots of new discussion groups to share grief and support.  Here's 
one set up by Andy Carvin.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sept11info
Not all of us made it.  If you can, please donate money or blood.
http://www.redcross.org/
These sites make credit card donations to the Red Cross easy.
Amazon, 
http://www.amazon.com/paypage/PKAXFNQH7EKCX
PayPal, 
http://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=p/gen/relief-outside
Yahoo, 
http://paydirect.yahoo.com/PD/onePage/onePageRedCrossMoney-drv.pd
----------
Open societies and open scholarship
There are complex and subtle connections between the kind of open society 
that is most vulnerable to acts of terror and the kind of open scholarship 
that is the focus of the FOS movement and this newsletter.  Open 
democracies can limit scholarship to those who can afford to buy it.  This 
was the norm before the internet gave us a viable alternative, and it is 
still the norm in most disciplines today.  But the converse tends not to 
hold.  Societies that limit democracy in the name of security also tend to 
regulate scholarship in the name of security.  The February jailing of 
Chinese scholar, Li Shaomin, for accepting Taiwanese funds to research 
subjects politically taboo in China is only one recent example in a 
dismally long list.
We should not confuse free as unpriced with free as uncensored.  Open 
societies can put a price on literature more consistently than they can 
silence it.  Leaving it uncensored is no barrier to charging money for 
it.  But putting it online free of charge is a barrier to censorship, even 
if it is one that governments around the world are gradually learning to 
surmount.
The U.S. is an open democracy.  It may fall short of your ideal of an open 
democracy, and even its own.  But when judged against past and present 
democracies, rather than ideals, it is far to the open end.  Yet the U.S. 
has convicted 2600 Magazine for publishing source code and linking to web 
sites that did the same.  The U.S. is prosecuting Dmitri Sklyarov for 
writing, discussing, and selling source code.  Edward Felten may be 
prosecuted for the same acts, and has yet to get a court to declare that he 
had a First Amendment right to publish the fruits of his research.
It already seems that one response to the attacks on New York and 
Washington will be the kind of diminution of liberty that facilitates law 
enforcement, for example, more airport searches, more sidewalk face 
scanning, more email eavesdropping, less strong encryption.  If so, then 
the U.S. will become a less open society.  But it will not on that account 
alone become less open with its scholarship.
So above all, let's not oversimplify.  Open societies do not guarantee open 
scholarship, and open scholarship does not guarantee open 
societies.  Within limits, each can take its lumps without the other 
suffering.  However, each is an important support, in a complex web of 
support, for the other.  Hence, they tend to thrive or suffer 
together.  Unfortunately, seeing them both compromised and limited is more 
common than seeing both thrive.  This is a reason for special vigilance in 
the months to come.
Li Shaomin, Jailers Who Thrive on Silence
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/10/opinion/10LI.html?todaysheadlines
Declan McCullagh, Anti-Attack Feds Push Carnivore
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46747,00.html
Declan McCullagh, Congress Mulls Stiff Crypto Laws
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46816,00.html
----------
PLoS aftermath
Arthur Graaff reported in the September 7 _Content Wire_ that the Public 
Library of Science (PLoS) boycott did not materialize.  Elsevier Science 
CEO Derk Haank has asserted that there is no evidence that the boycott is 
taking place.
http://www.content-wire.com/Home/Index.cfm?ccs=86&cs=684
* Postscript.  Do you have any evidence to the contrary?  If so, please let 
me know about it or post it directly to our discussion forum.
----------
Free Online Plagiarism Sources
Most cheating services charge money; that's the point.  But schoolsucks.com 
gives away its term papers for free.  What makes schoolsucks so 
philanthropic?  The answer seems to be its founder's contemptuous attitude 
toward education.  His web site was inspired by the "mediocrity" he 
discovered as a journalism student.  [Insert punchline here.]
Laurie Flynn, The Wonder Years:  Homework is Free Online
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/10/technology/ebusiness/10CRIB.html
* Postscript.  FOS makes cheating easier for the same reason that it makes 
research easier.  But it also makes cheating roughly as easy to detect as 
it is to commit. So bright cheaters will not plagiarize from FOS sites that 
their teachers can search for free.  But not all cheaters are 
bright.  There are many kinds of short-sighted students who steal from 
sources their teachers can easily consult.  Some want to get caught (they 
were pressured into their major by a parent).  Some are weak of will (their 
plagiarism is more about impulse than cunning).  Some are dim (proved e.g. 
by plagiarizing from another student in the same course in the same year or 
from their teacher's own articles).
* PPS.  The managers of plagiarism sites call them "research" sites.  (And 
in class they were just "resting their eyes".)  Plagiarism sites make bad 
research sites.  They don't have the breadth, depth, quality, or timeliness 
needed for real research, and they usually cost more money than real 
research.  But research sites function perfectly well as plagiarism sites, 
at least for students writing on advanced topics.  If this is a problem, 
then it's one shared by all literature (print or online, free or priced), 
and one that affects FOS less than priced and password-protected scholarship.
----------
Beyond DMCA
The Security Systems Standards and Certification Act (SSSCA) is the next 
chapter of U.S. copyright law, if Fritz Hollings and the Senate Commerce 
Committee have their way.  The SSSCA would prohibit the sale of computer 
equipment that does not contain federally approved security 
technologies.  (Old equipment would be grandfathered in.)  It would also 
prohibit removing security measures from computer equipment and 
distributing copyrighted material with their security measures 
disabled.  The last two offenses would be felonies punishable by up to five 
years in prison and half a million dollars in fines.
Quoting Jonathan Potter, executive director of the Digital Media 
Association:  "It's about as egregiously an anti-technology bill, in its 
draft form, as anything I've ever seen.  It would have the United States 
government approving or disapproving every semiconductor, every server and 
essentially any digital information technology device prior to coming to 
market."
Quoting Preston Padden, executive VP of the Walt Disney Company:  "This is 
an exceedingly moderate and reasonable approach."
Declan McCullagh, New Copyright Bill Heading to DC
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46655,00.html
Declan McCullagh, Hollywood Loves Hollings' Bill
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46671,00.html
Robert Lemos, Draft bill calls for gov't copyright standard
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5096838,00.html
Working draft of the SSSCA (August 6)
http://cryptome.org/sssca.htm
Declan McCullagh's page on the SSSCA
http://216.110.42.179/docs/hollings.090701.html
Declan McCullagh's politech mailing list
http://www.politechbot.com/info/subscribe.html
Anti-SSSCA petition
http://www.petitiononline.com/SSSCA/petition.html
----------
Digitizing newspapers
Historians will hit the mother lode when more newspapers digitize their 
back issues and put them online.  The National Newspaper Association (NNA) 
and some corporate partners have undertaken to digitize 20,000 U.S. 
newspapers, some going back to the 17th century.  The digital collection 
will be called America's Chronicles (see FOSN for 7/10/01).  The project 
was to have been officially launched at the NNA's Milwaukee convention 
September 12.  But after the New York and Washington attacks, the NNA 
cancelled the convention.  When I hear that the project has launched, I'll 
publish a notice here.
The online newspapers will be scanned images, not digital texts.  But 
apparently users will be able to search full-text, even across the 
collection of papers.  Readers will also get all the flavor of the original 
fonts and illustrations.
The online collection will start out free of charge, and phase in 
micro-payments at a later date.  The price structure has not yet been 
determined.  The $100 million tab for digitization will be paid by 
corporate donors.
America's Chronicles
http://www.americaschronicles.com/home.asp
National Newspaper Association
http://www.nna.org/home.htm
* Postscript.  The New York Times is not part of the America's Chronicles 
project, but is digitizing its back issues on its own.  This week it put 
its Civil War issues (1860-1866) online.
http://www.nyt.ulib.org/read.cgi?type=contents
----------
Developments
* According to the 2000 ISI Citation Reports, _Organic Letters_ has 
surpassed _Tetrahedon Letters_ in impact.  This is significant because 
_Organic Letters_ is a two-year-old journal launched by the American 
Chemical Society and SPARC in response to the exorbitant subscription 
prices charged by other journals of organic chemistry.  _Tetrahedon 
Letters_ was its closest commercial rival and, at 41 years old, much better 
established.  (PS:  This news shows many things.  Price and impact are not 
directly correlated.  Journals cannot use high impact factors to justify 
high prices.  Libraries, here coordinated by SPARC, have the power to bring 
down prices without dropping first-rate journals in favor of second-rate 
journals.)
?page=f45
* Two experts on network security have taken their professional work off 
the internet, fearing prosecution in the wake of the Dmitri Sklyarov arrest 
and the legal threat hanging over Edward Felten.  Fred Cohen and Dug Song 
both fear that the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) could be 
construed to prohibit their scientific publications and software.  (PS 
bottom line:  The DMCA and the practice of federal prosecutors are now 
inducing self-censorship in prudent scientists.)
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200-7079519.html
* Microsoft has released version 2.0 of its ebook reader.  It has multiple 
levels of security (all of which have been broken), multiple highlight 
colors, and a new navigation tool called Riffle Control.  With a physical 
book you can eyeball the number of pages and open to a page roughly 65% 
into the book.  Riffle Control lets you do the same thing with a mouse 
click on a marked bar.
http://www.pdabuzz.com/Features/PPC2002/index8.html
* The International Digital Electronic Access Library (IDEAL) has been 
licensed to all 64 Canadian universities.  IDEAL is a collection of 
(unfree) online journals and databases in the STM fields.  This is the 
first nationwide license for IDEAL sources.
http://www.idealibrary.com/news/idw13d.jsp
* At its annual dinner on September 12, the Association of Learned and 
Professional Society Publishers (ALPSP) announced the 2001 
ALPSP/Charlesworth awards (See FOSN for 7/10/01.)  The Nature Publishing 
Group won for learned journals.  SPARC won for service to non-profit 
publishing.  See the ALPSP web site for the other four awards.
http://www.alpsp.org/awards2001.htm
* What if thousands of people in a large city read the same book at the 
same time, and wore a lapel pin to encourage spontaneous conversations 
about the book?  This wonderful idea is taking life in Chicago, Seattle, 
Boise, Buffalo, and Rochester.  --I know that this has only a tenuous 
connection to FOS (would a city ever read John Stuart Mill's _On 
Liberty_?), but after Tuesday you may long, as I do, for forms of communal 
conversation wider than the line at the post office and deeper than online 
chat.
http://www.bergen.com/editorials/read0920010909.htm
http://www.salon.com/books/wire/2001/09/10/mockingbird/index.html
----------
New on the web
* On September 10, England's Resource Discovery Network (RDN) launched its 
Physical Sciences Information Gateway (PSIGate).  RDN is a series of 
disciplinary hubs linking to free content in those disciplines.
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/homenew.htm
* On September 10, York University launched the History and Theory of 
Pschology E-Print Arvchive (HTP Prints).  This is an OAI-compliant archive 
for psychology and the history of psychology inspired by arXiv and CogPrints.
http://htpprints.yorku.ca/
* The _American Scientist_ E-Print Discussion Forum moderated by Stevan 
Harnad now has a mirror.  The forum is probably the oldest, most active, 
and most comprehensive devoted to FOS issues.  You may know it under the 
name, September98Forum.  The forum will soon have a second mirror at the 
eprints.org site.
Original forum site
http://amsci-forum.amsci.org/archives/American-Scientist-Open-Access-Forum.html
Mirror at Harnad's Southampton site
http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/index.html
* Paul Mennega has launched the Project Gutenberg Reader, an innovative 
ebook web site that brings the interface options of an ebook reader to HTML 
texts and ordinary browsers.  Think of it as an open version of what 
normally uses encrypted files on dedicated hardware.  The Gutenberg Reader 
lets users control font style and size, add bookmarks, and take advantage 
of many different navigation options.  It also lets users search for ebooks 
by title, author, user rating, or date added to the system.  It works with 
any HTML text, though it was inspired by the huge archive of online 
full-text books at Project Gutenberg.  The texts are free and the reader is 
free.
Project Gutenberg Reader
http://www.pgreader.com/
Project Gutenberg
http://promo.net/pg/
* Recall that Dmitri Sklyarov's software to break the encryption on Adobe 
ebooks was legal in Russia, where it was written.  Sklyarov was only 
arrested because he presented his ideas, and distributed his software, in 
the U.S., where the DMCA is the law.  (The DMCA anti-circumvention clause 
criminalizes the manufacture of technologies to bypass copy-protection on 
copyrighted works.)  On August 31, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 
issued a statement warning Russian programmers that they may be arrested 
under the DMCA while in U.S. territory even if Sklyarov himself is 
acquitted.  Here's the original Russian statement with an unofficial 
English translation.
http://www.planetpdf.com/planetpdf/pdfs/mfawarning_engtrans.pdf
* Australia's Radio National broadcast a story on FOS ("Knowledege 
Indignation:  Road Rage on the Information Superhighway") on August 8.  The 
station web site now has a transcript of the broadcast and links to the 
RealAudio sound file.  The show was produced by Stan Correy.
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/bbing/stories/s345514.htm
* In August, the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) 
launched a new journal, CLIRinghouse.  It has tables of contents and 
abstracts online for free, but not full-text.  The first issue contains 
articles on online learning, digitization budgets, deciding what to 
digitize, and drawing together those who should decide how to build a 
digital collection.
http://www.clir.org/pubs/cliringhouse/house01.html
----------
Share your thoughts
* The Linking and Exploring Authority Files (LEAF) project would like 
representatives of archives, libraries, and museums to fill out its user 
survey on how your institution deals with name authority files.  Today 
(September 14) is the last day to submit comments.
http://www.crxnet.com/leaf/survey/english/page1.php
* Canada is considering legislation comparable to the U.S. DMCA, including 
the controversial anti-circumvention clause under which Dmitri Sklyarov was 
arrested.  The Canadian Intellectual Property Policy Directorate has 
solicited public comments on the legislation and will accept them only 
until September 15 (tomorrow).
http://www.eff.org/alerts/20010907_eff_canada_cpdci_alert.html
(I know that the deadlines are very short for the last two items.  That's 
why I posted them to the discussion forum earlier in the week.)
* The College of Staten Island Library is conducting a survey on the use of 
ebooks, especially in research.  It will welcome comments until October 15.
http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/libinfo/eBookSurvey.html
* If you're a subscriber to _Content Intelligence_, you're invited to fill 
out a reader survey.  There seems to be no deadline.
http://www.smartrevenue.com/Lyracustsat1.asp
* The Medical Library Association seeks nominations for its annual Louise 
Darling Medal for Distinguished Achievement in Collection Development in 
the Health Sciences.  It will accept nominations until November 1.
http://www.mlanet.org/pdf/awards/darmedal_072000.pdf
* JISC is soliciting proposals to develop and contribute collection-level 
content to the Archives Hub service.  It will accept proposals until 
November 7.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/pub01/c04_01.html
----------
In other publications
* The National Academy Press (NAP) publishes all 2,100 of its books both in 
print and online.  What's more, access to the online copies is free of 
charge.  (See FOSN for 4/12/01.)  It has always claimed that the free 
access to the online copies stimulated sales of print copies more than it 
depressed them.  Writing for the NAP in the September 14 _Chronicle of 
Higher Education_, Michael Jensen reiterates this conclusion for a doubting 
world.  It is all the more striking because in the year just ended, most 
non-profit book publishers did poorly; by contrast, NAP is having a record 
year in sales.  Jensen reports that other presses which have tried the 
experiment (Brookings Institute, MIT Press, Illinois, Columbia) have 
experienced similar results.  Jensen also offers his analysis of why free 
online books stimulate rather than kill the market for priced print books.
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v48/i03/03b02401.htm
* In the September 13 _New York Times_, Katie Hafner describes research on 
ants suggesting that packet-switching networks can be made even more 
efficient at exchanging information.  If true, this could improve connect 
and download times without improving the hardware infrastructure.
http://college1.nytimes.com/guests/articles/2001/09/13/867736.xml
* You knew that paid placement distorts search engine results.  That's why 
GoTo (now called Overture) is a search engine for consumers, not 
researchers.  But did you know that Inktomi search engines have allowed 
corporate partners to boost the placement of their clients and blacklist 
their competitors?  In the September 12 _Search Engine World Quarterly_, 
Brett Tabke lays out the evidence.  (PS:  In light of this, and the 
movement toward paid placement, when would you trust a search engine for 
critical research?  Would it have to make the scope of its index and its 
relevance or sorting algorithm public?  Would it have to be open 
source?  Would it be enough if it were made by scholars for scholars?)
http://www.searchengineworld.com/newsletter/2001/
* The September 10 _Chronicle of Higher Education_ contains an interview 
with Katherine Hayles (Professor of English at UCLA), who believes that 
putting fiction online and taking advantage of the possibilities of 
hypertext change its nature.  (PS:  This makes sense.  What are the 
analogous changes to online, hypertext non-fiction?)
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001091001t.htm
* Also in the September 10 _Chronicle_, Andrea Foster describes Rep. Rick 
Boucher's criticism of the DMCA.  Boucher is a Democrat from Virginia who 
argues that the DMCA tilts too far in favor of copyright holders and does 
not sufficiently respect fair-use rights, reader rights, and First 
Amendment rights.  He is preparing an "inventory of concerns" about the 
DMCA, in preparation for a bill to amend the DMCA, and expects to finish it 
by January.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001091101t.htm
* In the September 7 _BizReport_, Steven Bonisteel summarizes a recent 
Ipsos-Reid report finding that Canadians want their internet content free 
and will be reluctant to pay for it.  The report apparently focuses on news 
and entertainment, not scholarship.
http://www.bizreport.com/article.php?art_id=2067&width=1600
* In the September issue of _Information Today_, Péter Jacsó reviews the 
Joint Conference on Digital Libraries held June 24-28 in Roanoke, 
Virginia.  The conference was sponsored by the ACM and IEEE.
http://www.infotoday.com/it/sep01/jacso.htm
* The results of the ALPSP/EASE survey on peer review from November 2000 is 
now online at the ALPSP web site.  Among the results:  only 40% of 
peer-reviewed journals surveyed practice blind review.  12% do not conceal 
the names of referees when sharing the assessments with authors.  15% 
assess the quality of the referees' assessments.  Most journals either do 
not compensate referees or do so only with a printed acknowledgment.
http://www.alpsp.org/peerev.pdf
* Anthony Watkinson's substantial report on print and electronic monograph 
publishing is now online at the UK Publishers Association (PA).  He argues 
that the decline in supply and demand we see with specialized print 
monographs can be reversed by turning to electronic publication.
http://www.publishers.org.uk/News%26Eve.nsf/3186850827303a0e80256817004dce6e/8d595f63a4d655ea80256a9d0038f54b?OpenDocument
(Attention PA:  Do your URLs, here and next, have to be this long?)
* Peter Sowden's 2001 Update to the UK Publishers Association compendium of 
data on university library spending on books and journals is now 
online.  Among the report highlights:  in 1998-99, compared to the year 
before, journal spending increased by 9.1% while journal prices rose by 
9.5% (showing that cancellation is one method for coping with 
inflation).  Spending on electronic sources rose by 21.5%, while spending 
for print books rose by only 1.5%.
http://www.publishers.org.uk/News%26Eve.nsf/3186850827303a0e80256817004dce6e/e14e20eaec8617d880256a03003bebda/$FILE/ULspend2001.PDF
* Similarly, Karen Wiesner has updated her July 2000 report on the 
acceptance rates at a large number of ebook publishers.  The numbers 
support her conclusion that the common perception that "epublishers accept 
anything" is a myth.
http://www.epccentral.org/accept.html
* In an August 27 article at _TrendSiters_, Sam Vaknin traces the fall of 
p-zines and the rise of some of the electronic supplements and alternatives 
that are transforming them.
http://www.trendsiters.com/article1023.html
In another August 27 article at the same site, Vaknin argues that libraries 
"failed...spectacularly to ride the tiger of the internet" and now compete 
with it.
http://www.trendsiters.com/article1024.html
----------
Subscribing options reduced
My host for the newsletter and discussion forum, Topica.com, no longer 
allows list-owners like me to add new members.  This means that I cannot, 
on my own say-so, subscribe even those who consent to subscribe.  In the 
past I had this option and I used it often for those of you who asked to 
join the list.  In the future, subscribers must sign themselves up.  Topica 
is making the change in order to assure ISPs that all Topica email (350 
million pieces per month) comes from opt-in users.  This is a good cause, 
and it should prevent the newsletter from being blocked by ISP spam filters 
that block mass mailings from hosts that cannot provide this 100% opt-in 
assurance.  I'm sorry to lose the flexibility to make life easier for 
subscribers, but I hate spam enough to want to cooperate with its total 
eradication.
----------
Conferences
If you plan to attend one of the following conferences, please share your 
observations with us through our discussion forum.
* DELOS Workshop on Interoperability in Digital Libraries
http://www.darmstadt.gmd.de/delite/DelosWorkshop01/frame-delos2001.htm
Darmstadt, September 8-9
* Experimental OAI Based Digital Library Systems
http://notesmail.cs.odu.edu/faculty/zubair/workshop.nsf/OaiEcdlWorkshop?OpenForm
Darmstadt, September 8
* Preserving Online Content for Future Generations
http://www.bnf.fr/pages/infopro/dli_ECDL2001.htm
Darmstadt, September 8
* International Autumn School on the Digital Library and E-publishing for 
Physics, Astronomy and Mathematics
http://cwis.kub.nl/~ticer/autumn01/
Geneva, September 9-14
* Digital Libraries:  Advanced Methods and Technologies, Digital Collections
http://rcdl2001.krc.karelia.ru/
Petrozavodsk, September 11-13
* The Fundamentals of Digital Projects (Illinois Digitization Workshop)
http://nautilus.outreach.uiuc.edu/Idi/workshop.asp
Urbana, Illinois, September 20
* Intellectual Property and Multimedia in the Digital Age:  Copyright Town 
Meeting
http://www.ninch.org/copyright/townmeetings01/2001.html
New York, September 24; Cincinnati, October 27; Eugene, Oregon, November 19
* Steal This Session: The Digital Millennium Copyright Act Great Debate 
(part of the 2001 Seybold Summit)
http://www.planetebook.com/mainpage.asp?webpageid=230&nl
San Francisco, September 26
* Digital Resources for Research in the Humanities
http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/Arts/departs/rihss/drrh.html
Sydney, September 26-28
* EBLIDA Workshop on the Acquisition and Usage of Electronic Resources
http://www.eblida.org/conferences/licensing/licensing.htm
The Hague, September 28
* Exploring an Interface Between Cultural Heritage, Net Art, and State of 
the Art Projects
http://130.226.231.106/
Copenhagen, October 3-5
* Summer School on the Digital Library 2001:  Electronic Publishing
http://cwis.kub.nl/~ticer/summer01/course3/
Florence, October 7-12
* IT in the Transformation of the Library
http://www.lita.org/forum01/index.htm
Milwaukee, October 11-14
* Collections & Access for the 21st Century Scholar:  A Forum to Explore 
the Roles of the Research Library
http://www.arl.org/forum/index.html
Washington, D.C., October 19-20
* International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications 2001
http://www.nii.ac.jp/dc2001/
Tokyo, October 22-26
* e-Book Lessons:  From Life-Cycle to User Experiences
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 23
* Copyright Issues in the Electronic Age
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 29
* Paperless Publishing:  Peer Review, Production, and Publication
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 30
* The XML Revolution:  What Scholarly Publishers Need to know
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, November 1
* Information in a Networked World:  Harnessing the Flow
http://www.asis.org/Conferences/AM01/index.html
Washington D.C., November 2-8
* Electronic Book 2001:  Authors, Applications, and Accessibility
http://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/ebook2001/
Washington D.C., November 5-7
* Content Summit 01
http://www.contentsummit.com/
Zurich, November 7-9
* Internet Librarian 2001
http://www.infotoday.com/il2001/
Pasadena, November 6-8
* First Annual Meeting of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium
http://www.tei-c.org/Publicity/pisa.html
Pisa, November 16-17
==========
This is the Free Online Scholarship Newsletter (ISSN 1535-7848).
Please feel free to forward this newsletter to interested colleagues.  If 
you are reading a forwarded copy of this issue, you may subscribe yourself 
by signing up at the FOS home page or the FOS Newsletter page.
FOS home page, general information, subscriptions, editorial position, 
feedback form
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/index.htm
FOS Newsletter, subscriptions, back issues
http://www.topica.com/lists/suber-fos
FOS Discussion Forum, subscriptions, postings
http://www.topica.com/lists/fos-forum
Guide to the FOS Movement
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/guide.htm
Peter Suber
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters
Copyright (c) 2001, Peter Suber
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/copyrite.htm
** If you receive this newsletter by email, then please delete the "easy 
unsubscribe" footer (below) before forwarding it to friends or 
colleagues.  It contains a code identifying you as the original recipient 
of the email. If someone down the forwarding chain clicks on the 
unsubscribe link, then you will be unsubscribed. **
Received on Fri Sep 14 2001 - 17:57:20 BST