[prev in list] [next in list] [prev in thread] [next in thread] 

List:       publib
Subject:    [PubLib] ALCTS Webinar: Authority Records and Copyright Determination
From:       ALCTS-CE Announce <alcts.ce.announce () GMAIL ! COM>
Date:       2014-10-29 15:29:09
Message-ID: CANAzje5hQiy4GW86NHvuCj_KXUeh1j9q+Jjx8G4iF32OPe30tA () mail ! gmail ! com
[Download RAW message or body]

Apologies in advance for multiple postings.

ALCTS Webinar: Authority Records and Copyright Determination

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Sessions begin at 11 am Pacific | 12 Mountain | 1 pm Central | 2 pm Eastern
and last about an hour.

What do Pride and Prejudice, Sherlock Holmes, British Insects and How to
Identify Them,
<http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo.31924018275234;view=1up;seq=11>
and Sixty Years a Bookman
<http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$b128242;view=1up;seq=9> have in
common? These books are all in the public domain, like many others
collected on our library shelves. What information does it take to know if
they are in the public domain, and where do enhanced authority records fit
into this? Virtually all copyright terms around the world are based on some
variation of the formula:

author's life + years = copyright term

To calculate when a book enters the public domain, it is important to know
the death date for the author.

For the past five years the IMLS-funded Copyright Review Management System
(CRMS), based at the University of Michigan Library, identified public
domain works one copyright determination at a time. As part of CRMS, we
started to identify author death dates that were not already in authority
records. We began depositing our discoveries of author death dates in NACO
authority records as a pilot project in 2013 to enhance the data that has
been so helpful to CRMS.

In this webinar we present our copyright-centric view of authority records
and the impact you can make by simply adding an author death date. We will
show you how NACO-trained catalogers improve authority records by including
death date information that will be of value to a copyright review. We will
also outline how cataloging practice relates to bibliographic copyright
determination, including examples like federal documents, publication date
range, and associated country.

Learning Outcomes

Webinar attendees will learn:

   -

   how authority record data--including death dates, nationality, and
   publication dates--support copyright determination
   -

   why enhancing NACO authority records can help
   -

   awareness of the gap between legal definitions and cataloging practice
   -

   the impact enhanced authority records can have in the identification of
   public domain works


Who Should Attend?

The webinar is aimed at catalogers interested in learning the copyright
implications of the data they put in catalog authority records, those
engaged in rights issues, and HathiTrust partners who will learn from our
copyright review activities.

Course Level & Prerequisites

beginner to intermediate level; no prerequisites

Presenters

Matt Carruthers is a NACO-trained cataloger and metadata projects librarian
at the University of Michigan, where he creates and transforms metadata in
support of library and university projects. He has experience with name
authority metadata in both bibliographic and archival contexts, utilizing
MARC and EAC-CPF, and he was a team member of the Remixing Archival
Metadata Project (RAMP).

Kristina Eden is copyright instruction librarian for the University of
Michigan Copyright Office. She leads the training team for the Copyright
Review Management System,
<http://www.lib.umich.edu/imls-national-leadership-grant-crms-world/> a
series of three IMLS National Leadership Grant projects based at the
University of Michigan which have collectively identified more than 239,000
public domain works. She helped initiate the pilot project to send author
death dates found during the course of copyright review to NACO certified
catalogers for updating authority records.

Fee

ALCTS Member (individual) . . . $43

Nonmember (individual) . . . $59

International (individual) . . . $43

Groups

(Applies to a group of people who will watch the webinar together from one
access point.)

Member group . . . $99

Nonmember group . . . $129

All webinars are recorded and the one-time fee includes unlimited access to
the webinar recording. All registered attendees will receive the link to
the recorded session, so if you are unable to attend the webinar at the
time it is presented, you will have the opportunity to listen to the
recording at your convenience.

How to Register

To register, complete the online registration form
<http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=olweb&Template=/Conference/ConferenceList.cfm&ConferenceTypeCode=X>
 or register by mail
<http://www.ala.org/alcts/files/confevents/upcoming/webinar/alcts_webinar_reg.pdf>
for the session you would like to attend.

Contact

For questions about registration, contact ALA Registration by calling
1-800-545-2433 and press 5 or email registration@ala.org. For all other
questions or comments related to the webinars, contact Julie Reese, ALCTS
Events Manager, at 1-800-545-2433, ext. 5034 or jreese@ala.org.

Posted on behalf of the ALCTS Continuing Education Committee.

Post to publib@oclc.org
To drop or change your list settings
http://listserv.oclc.org/scripts/wa.exe?REPORT
List archives at
http://listserv.oclc.org/archives/publib.html


[prev in list] [next in list] [prev in thread] [next in thread] 

Configure | About | News | Add a list | Sponsored by KoreLogic