Sign-ups are now open for the Digital Commonwealth conference.
I'll be speaking on copyright. Click here to see the whole program: http://www.nmrls.org/digitalcommonwealth/Digital_Commonwealth_Conference.htm
Second Annual Digital Library Conference and Vendor Fair, Hogan Center, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Massachusetts, October 25, 2007
May I Digitize this Photo? Go With the Flow
When may we digitize a photograph, diary, letter? When is an old photo in the public domain? If it’s not, is there still a way we can scan it legally? What disclaimers should we use? This talk uses an easy to follow flow chart to help make sense of complicated questions.
Speaker: Mary Minow, Library Law Consultant
The Digital Commonwealth: the Bridge to Library 2.0
Library 2.0 projects have the potential of transforming library staff and programs, and engaging patrons in new levels of involvement in their community and library. Building the Digital Commonwealth will allow libraries to implement ideas and technologies associated with Library 2.0 and identify individuals who can help them manage the transition to this new technology. What’s the downside? We’ll talk about that too!
Speaker: Marshall Keys, Library Consultant, MDA Consulting
Breakout sessions:
Virtual Archives: Preparing to Create a Digital Collection / Gregor Trinkaus-Randall, Preservation Specialist at the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners
Case Study: Statewide Digital Project, Connecticut History Online / Kendall Wiggin, Connecticut State Librarian
The Future of the Past: Digital Libraries in the Age of Social Software/ Elizabeth Thomsen, Services Manager for NOBLE, the North of Boston Library Exchange
How do they do it? Displaying Digital Images on the Web / Nancy Heywood, Digital Projects Coordinator, Massachusetts Historical Society
Scanning 101 / Scott Kehoe, Technology Consultant, Northeastern Massachusetts Regional Library System
Case Study: Museum Imaging Workflow / David Mathews, Manager, Imaging Studio, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
New Trends for a Traditional Subject: Primary Sources and the World Wide Web in Teacher Training and K-12 Curriculum Support / Jayne Gordon, Director of Education and Public Programs, Massachusetts Historical Society and Kathleen Barker, Education Coordinator, Massachusetts Historical Society
Building Repositories: Three Perspectives / Ann Devenish, MBLWHOI Library, Woods Hole, MA; Michael Bennett, Access Services Supervisor, CW/MARS; Mark Caprio, Digital Repository Program Manager, Boston College
Metadata Considerations for Digital Collections / Amy Benson, Program Director, Digital Services, NELINET, Inc.
Case Studies in Digital Collaboration: Sudbury’s Goodnow Library and Town Departments and the Topsfield Historical Society and Town Library / Bill Talentino, Director, Goodnow Library, Sudbury; Laura Scott Lowell, Goodnow Library, Sudbury; Bill Whiting, Topsfield Historical Society; and Jackie White, Director, Topsfield Town Library.
Picture This! (But Don’t Forget the Context) / Ronald A. Gagnon, Executive Director, North of Boston Library Exchange
Mary: This just came in as a comment to http://blog.librarylaw.com/librarylaw/2005/11/my_library_elf_.html but I figured no one would see it there. I think that any smart tech person could figure out how to "roll your own" RSS feeds from a library's LMS system, needing only the user's library card number and PIN (if needed to get into the records). Why do you say end users couldn't empower Elf to act on their behalf... wouldn't that be considered consent? Is consent sufficient in the UK?
What concerns me is that the users don't need to give consent if the LMS password system is weak, as it is in so many libraries in the U.S. Your ex-girlfriend needs only your library card number and sometimes a (weak) PIN (often the last four digits of your phone number). Do UK LMS companies offer stronger PINs than four digits?
Many have told me that that this weak security has always been the case, Elf or no Elf. The difference that Elf or any RSS feeds (laden with personal content) makes is the convenience of daily delivery of the records from hither and yon.
By the way, I just happened to go back to the search box in Bloglines the other day, and typed in "library elf for" and then chose [Search for Feeds] and got about 200 personal feeds from probably unwitting library users. Gives me their first names and one more click shows their libraries, books out/requested etc. At least Elf got rid of their email addresses. Still, quite disconcerting to see so much personal information floating around, free for me to capture. I could (but won't) add a screenshot of the names with the libraries and titles.BloglinesElfScreenshot.doc