Fri, 10 Feb 2012 19:16:37 -0500
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From: Klaus Graf <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2012 02:49:09 +0100
"The AFM content is copyright American Medical Association (AMA) and
licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No
Derivative Works 3.0 United States License"
This is interesting because it is far from being clear to what content
EXACTLY the ND CC license refers. If the content is the single article
re-users are unable to reproduce parts of an article (beside fair use)
for noncommercial purposes giving attribution to AFM. If the whole
archive is CC-licensed this means that a single article cannot be
re-used, only the whole archive. This is the meaning of non-derivative
(ND). You cannot alter the content but this has the condition that it
is clear WHAT the content is. I think there was little thought on the
ND implications by AFM.
Klaus Graf
2012/2/10 LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]>:
> From: "Randy S. Kiefer" <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2012 15:42:59 -0500
>
> The AMA's "Archives of Family Medicine" and “JAMA Français” are now
> available from the CLOCKSS Archive. The American Medical Association
> announced on January 23rd that the journals "Archives of Family
> Medicine" and “JAMA Français” are no longer available from their
> journal site and will be accessible through the CLOCKSS Archive.
>
> "Archives of Family Medicine" and “JAMA Français” were removed from
> the Highwire platform on August 15, 2011. The CLOCKSS Archives, the
> AMA's preservation partners, will provide free access to the title and
> take responsibility for its ongoing long-term preservation.
>
> See http://www.clockss.org/clockss/Triggered_Content
>
> "The AMA, along with the founding members of the CLOCKSS Archive,
> agreed early on to make triggered content in CLOCKSS available to the
> world for free," explains Randy Kiefer, Executive Director of the
> CLOCKSS Archive. "That policy sets the CLOCKSS Archive apart, and is a
> result of the community-based governance by libraries and publishers.
> The CLOCKSS Archive's digital preservation efforts enable libraries of
> all sizes to serve future scholars, researchers, and students."
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