"I certainly never write a review about a book I don't think worth reviewing, a flat-out bad book, unless it's an enormously fashionable bad book." --
says, John Gardner in Conversations with John Gardner
Quoted from 'Dictionary of Library and Information Science Quotations'     Edited by Mohamed Taher & L S Ramaiah. ISBN: 8185689423 (New Delhi , Aditya, 1994) p.150. Available @ Amazon.com

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Copying an Entire Article Without Permission - OK in Some Cases?

The blog post is continuously updated, last updated Mar 19th, 2012
  • Court Declares Newspaper Excerpt on Online Forum is Fair Use, Righthaven in Ruins

    WebProNews, Chris Crum | March 22, 2011
    Extract:
    Judge Finds Full Article Copy to Be Fair Use

    Last month, we asked whether full article-copying could be ruled as fair use. We now know the answer. Yes, it can.

    Do you think duplicating an article in its entirety without permission is OK in some cases?...

    Righthaven, a company whose business model relies on copyright lawsuits for newspapers, has essentially lost its second fair use case. The first one was over a partial article sampling, but this most recent one involved the copying of a full 33-paragraph article from the the Las Vegas Review Journal (with credit) by the Center for Intercultural Organizing, a ten-person Portland, Oregon-based nonprofit organization set up to preserve immigrant and refugee rights. The case has not been dismissed yet, but he judge presiding over it says he plans to. continue reading
  • Sunday, March 20, 2011

    New Hazards For Book Reviewers, by Steve Denning

    From a Book Review to a Criminal Trial in France
    By ADAM LIPTAK, The New York Times,
    "In a little more than a week, a court in Paris will decide whether a law professor in New York committed criminal libel by publishing a book review."

    Steve Denning, RETHINK - Forbes, Feb. 21 2011
    EXTRACT:
    In a bizarre story in The New York Times...

    ... Moreoever “France is an odd place to adjudicate a claim concerning a review written in English by a German professor of a book written in English by an author living in Israel. The book was, moreover, published by a Dutch firm. The review was published on a Web site in New York. True, Ms. Calvo-Goller is a French citizen. But still.”

    What’s next? Students suing their teachers for poor grades? Commenters in Amazon being sued for their less-than-five-star reviews?
    Continue reading

    Thursday, March 17, 2011

    Fee for service or pay as you go to read NYT Newspaper

    --this post will be updated as new reviews / criticism appears on fee-based access

    A look at the trends in the market shows many options to charge fee for users. A sample of this in today's news is the following:

  • N.Y. Times tests website fees on Canadians, CBC News Posted: Mar 17, 2011 6:12 PM ET
  • New York Times to Put Up Paywall March 28
  • Game On: New York Times Unveils Digital Subscriptions