From: Heather Morrison <[log in to unmask]> Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2013 15:48:23 -0800 Thanks, Kristen, this is good to see. The Terms and Conditions raises more questions for me. Why is there no mention of the public domain? Why do the Terms and Conditions refer to being in addition to the JSTOR terms and conditions and library licenses? It is good to see that JSTOR is at least providing free access to these works, however it seems to me that JSTOR is continuing to assert new copyright in works that are clearly in the public domain. Many of the journals in Highwire Free are providing this or better access to their own journals within a year of publication: http://highwire.stanford.edu/lists/freeart.dtl This is a model that I would advise JSTOR and all participating journals to consider. Or, if JSTOR will not consider, then perhaps journals should move to another service, whether Highwire or looking to see if their local library is now able to support journal archiving (many are). It would be a nice gesture to prominently display a link to the Early Journal Content on JSTOR's home page, ideally before Aaron Swartz' funeral tomorrow. best, Heather Morrison On 2013-01-14, at 3:39 PM, Kristen Garlock wrote: > Hello, Heather - > > There have been no changes to the Early Journal Content. I'm sorry that original link doesn't work at the moment - I'll see if we can redirect to the current link: > > http://about.jstor.org/service/early-journal-content > > In case folks are not aware - metadata and OCR for this content are also available as a data bundle for text mining purposes. Info and instructions are at http://dfr.jstor.org/??view=text&&helpview=about_ejc. > > Regards, > > Kristen Garlock > Associate Director, Education & Outreach - JSTOR > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Heather Morrison [mailto:[log in to unmask]] > Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 6:33 PM > To: LibLicense-L Discussion Forum; [log in to unmask] T.F. > Subject: [SCHOLCOMM] JSTOR Early Journal Content: page not found > > Just tried to access JSTOR's Early Journal Content and got the message: "page not found". Link from this website: > http://about.jstor.org/news/jstor%E2%80%93free-access-early-journal-content-and-serving-unaffiliated-users > > Is the link broken, perhaps? Surely JSTOR has not taken down the very limited to access to public domain works (before 1923 in the US, before 1870 elsewhere) that they have been providing since shortly after Aaron Swartz downloaded their archive? > > best, > > Heather G. Morrison > The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com