ALCTS Webinar: Can I Copyright My Data?
From:
ALCTS-CE Announce <alcts.ce.announce_at_gmail.com>
Apologies in advance for multiple postings.
ALCTS Webinar: Can I Copyright My Data?
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Sessions begin at 11 am Pacific | 12 Mountain | 1 pm Central | 2 pm
Eastern and last about an hour.
As if copyright and current publishing models aren't confusing enough,
sharing datasets makes it even more complex. Join our presenters who will
*
discuss the history of copyright, the purpose of intellectual
property laws and policies, and where datasets fit in to the story
*
define research data and describe the current landscape of data
sharing in the US
Attendees will learn about issues of data ownership and the role that
librarians can play in educating and promoting clear workflows for faculty.
Learning Outcomes
*
Outline the current landscape of data sharing and intellectual
property ownership.
*
Clear picture of how copyright applies to data.
Who Should Attend?
*
technical services librarians
*
academic librarians
*
institutional repository librarians
*
e-resources librarians
*
copyright/scholarly communications librarians
*
data management librarians
Prerequisites
none
Presenters
Sandra Aya Enimil is the head of the Copyright Resource Center at the
Ohio State University Libraries. Sandra provides information and
resources on using copyrighted materials and assists creators in
protecting their own copyright. Prior to working at Ohio State, she was
the archives/copyright manager of theChicago Defender newspaper. Sandra
earned law and masters of library and information science degrees from
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Sandra has bachelor of
arts degrees in political science and psychology from the University of
Michigan and a master's degree in international relations from the
University of Ghana.
Amanda Rinehart is data management services librarian at The Ohio State
University Libraries. Amanda comes to University Libraries from Illinois
State University, where she served as data librarian and head of the
Digital and Data Services Department. Prior to that appointment, Amanda
was e-science librarian at Brown University and worked eleven years at
the U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory of the USDA. She received an
MLIS from the University of South Florida, a master's of science in
botany and plant pathology at Michigan State University, and a bachelor
of arts from Kenyon College.
Fee
ALCTS Member (individual) . . . $43
Nonmember (individual) . . . $59
International (individual) . . . $43
Groups
(Applies to a group of people who will watch the webinar together from
one access point.)
Member group . . . $99
Nonmember group . . . $129
All webinars are recorded and the one-time fee includes unlimited access
to the webinar recording. All registered attendees will receive the link
to the recorded session, so if you are unable to attend the webinar at
the time it is presented, you will have the opportunity to listen to the
recording at your convenience.
How to Register
To register, complete the online registration form
<http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=olweb&Template=/Conference/ConferenceList.cfm&ConferenceTypeCode=X>or
register by mail
<http://www.ala.org/alcts/files/confevents/upcoming/webinar/alcts_webinar_reg.pdf>for
the session you would like to attend.
Contact
For questions about registration, contact ALA Registration by calling
1-800-545-2433 and press 5 or email registration_at_ala.org
<mailto:registration_at_ala.org>. For all other questions or comments
related to the webinars, contact Julie Reese, ALCTS Events Manager, at
1-800-545-2433, ext. 5034 or jreese_at_ala.org <mailto:jreese_at_ala.org>.
Posted on behalf of the ALCTS Continuing Education Committee.
Received on Wed Nov 19 2014 - 03:12:31 EST