From: Ivy Anderson <[log in to unmask]> Date: Wed, 16 Sep 2015 00:48:16 +0000 Denise, The language in the new model Liblicense agreement addresses both TDM rights and potential costs. It reads: Text and Data Mining. Authorized Users may use the Licensed Materials to perform and engage in text and/or data mining activities for academic research, scholarship, and other educational purposes, utilize and share the results of text and/or data mining in their scholarly work, and make the results available for use by others, so long as the purpose is not to create a product for use by third parties that would substitute for the Licensed Materials. Licensor will cooperate with Licensee and Authorized Users as reasonably necessary in making the Licensed Materials available in a manner and form most useful to the Authorized User. If Licensee or Authorized Users request the Licensor to deliver or otherwise prepare copies of the Licensed Materials for text and data mining purposes, any fees charged by Licensor shall be solely for preparing and delivering such copies on a time and materials basis. CDL hasn't attempted to negotiate this with ProQuest, but this is the basis on which I would seek to negotiate - Best, Ivy Anderson Director of Collections California Digital Library University of California, Office of the President [log in to unmask] | http://cdlib.org -----Original Message----- From: Denise Troll Covey <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tue, 15 Sep 2015 11:24:22 +0000 All, We recently inquired and received ProQuest’s “Content Delivery & Access Price Sheet” for TDM. The spreadsheet includes pricing and delivery methods for Historical Newspapers, Official Government Documents, History Vault, and Historical Periodicals. The prices vary depending on the delivery method – significantly lower for delivery from the cloud than delivery via hard drive, but most of the material is not available for delivery form the cloud. And the prices are outrageous, especially when you consider that much of the content is out of copyright and TDM is likely fair use of the content that is copyright protected. We suspect that library licensing fees covered ProQuest’s financial investment in scanning/OCRing this material, so why the exorbitant cost to enable TDM? Has anyone tried to negotiate with ProQuest to arrive at affordable TDM? Denise Denise Troll Covey Scholarly Communications Librarian Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8040-822X