Re: Research: Writ, Reason, and Practice

From: Couture Marc <couture.marc_at_TELUQ.UQAM.CA>
Date: Tue, 4 Aug 2009 12:48:54 -0400

On 4-Aug-09, at 6:45 AM, S. Harnad wrote:

 



> Aside: This formal side-issue has next to nothing to do with Open
Access and Green Open

> Access Mandates. 



 

As interesting as may be these discussions about the subtleties of
copyright law and its application to scholarly activities (and I, for
one, am truly interested in these), I agree that this forum is not
the right place to go further in that direction (or even as far as it
has gone).

 

Although I remain aware that many things I do on a routine basis may
(or do in fact) infringe copyright, I am perfectly satisfied by the
pragmatic approach suggested by Harnad.

 

The fact that a few months ago two law professors specialised in
copyright promptly sent me on request copies of those of their
articles to which I didn't have access, seemingly without any second
thought, reassures me in a way. To be true, there was not "request
button" involved, but I wonder what is really different (except the
time it took me to write my request and them to find the file and
write a polite answer - I appreciated the human touch though).

 

I suggest also to those interested an excellent (and much enjoyable)
paper from John Tehranian, "Infringement Nation: Copyright Reform and
the Law/Norm Gap", in which he describes a day in the life of a law
professor, during which he infringes copyright 83 times (including
when he sings "Happy Birthday" in a restaurant). Fortunately, the
article is available in OA http://bit.ly/EDNSA

 

Have a nice day, even if you will probably infringe copyright before
the sun sets.

 

Marc Couture
Received on Wed Aug 05 2009 - 02:15:17 BST

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