Anda belum login :: 24 Apr 2025 07:23 WIB
Detail
ArtikelCopyright Practice in the DDP: Practice makes Perfect (or at least workable)  
Oleh: Buttler, Dwayne K.
Jenis: Article from Books - E-Book
Dalam koleksi: A Guide to Distributed Digital Preservation, page 99-111.
Topik: origin and scope of copyright; DDPS; contributing content; preserving content; retrieving content
Isi artikelCopyright limits the use of many creative works, including some of those destined for distributed digital preservation (DDP) initiatives that use Private LOCKSS Networks (PLNs) or other technology solutions. The copyright within the creative works governs how they might be copied, distributed, and hence ultimately preserved. In theory, copyright law is simple but in practice far more difficult. Copyright can exert a cumulative effect on a DDP. A DDP locates multiple digital copies of a work in a geographically distributed fashion in order to best safeguard the work. Each copy and distribution in copyright law is a potential infringement, and raises liability for possibly infringing reproduction and distributions rights. The more copies reproduced and distributed, the greater the potential liability. This multiplying effect is intrinsic to DDPs. However, contributors and managers of DDPs can overcome this cumulative effect if institutions effectively manage copyright from the earliest stages of contributing content in a DDP. The cumulative effect more accurately echoes the dated underpinnings of pre-digital copyright law rather than practical barriers to creating DDPs.
Opini AndaKlik untuk menuliskan opini Anda tentang koleksi ini!

Kembali
design
 
Process time: 0 second(s)