Nobody said OCLC costs nothing. The information from MSU said OCLC was jacking up the price from $5K to $88K. I'm not understanding why that is all right.
In point of fact if all libraries dumped their catalogs to linked data, some xml files, those files could be crawled by various services and in various ways they could link up the data to point someone to the library's holdings. Who says OCLC has to have a monopoly on that? Suppose there was a site for people enthusiastic about some specific topic and part of what they wanted to share was lists of books about their topic. If they could send a spider out to crawl some or all libraries, they could link back to the library for that. Why should they not do that? Because ONLY OCLC is allowed to record and hand out information about which libraries hold which items? I don't think so. Google, Yahoo, Bing, Amazon any of those ought to be able to link back if they want to. OCLC wants you to think that ONLY OCLC is allowed to hold and make available that information. Don't drink the Koo-laid.
In paying $88K instead of $5K, is that library paying for support to libraries to catalog on OCLC? Or are they paying for OCLC to develop some "cloud based" ILS that they will then require (extort) people into participating in. Oh, and to do that you need to load up all your ordering and purchasing info into their central system so they have access to that. After all it's a cooperative right? Now what do you think they are going to do with all that interesting info about which libraries are paying what to purchase or access what? Do you think they will turn around and sell it commercial services? What will prevent them from doing that?
So we are allowing Ex Libris access to some information from SFX that they combine with some other info to try to recommend that someone interested in one journal article might also be interested in another journal article. We are in no way restrained from using the info ourselves, or sharing it with someone else.
But if OCLC had counts on which books had circulated how many times from our circ system, would they REQUIRE we give them that info and then REQUIRE we NOT give it to anyone else and then turn around and sell it Google or someone else to use in relevancy ranking? This excuse that we all must sacrifice for "The Cooperative" makes me think they should not be trusted.
Back to my original statement. That library expected to pay $.23 per bib which is what OCLC had been charging. It was not that they expected not to pay anything. But OCLC jacked up the price to $2.85. I believe the library is right to feel that extortion, not support of the cooperative is going on here. The cooperative needs to support the libraries, many of whom are having their budgets slashed.
If OCLC continues on their current course they will put themselves out of business. They need to lower their charges so strapped libraries can continue to participate. How can libraries defend exorbitant prices to support Worldcat? Technology has changed. You could probably put the thing on a flash drive which you could not when it was started.
It would be helpful for this list to continue discussion and experimentation of linked data and how we can share data that way. (Even if Big Brother OCLC is watching).
Frances McNamara
University of Chicago
-----Original Message-----
From: Next generation catalogs for libraries [mailto:NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Jacobs, Jane W
Sent: Monday, March 08, 2010 11:17 AM
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [NGC4LIB] OCLC and Michigan State at Impasse Over SkyRiver Cataloging, Resource Sharing Costs
Hear, Hear!
Speaking strictly for myself (see Below).
Although I'm uncomfortable with the role of self-appointed defender of OCLC, and am sure they can be faulted on many points, they have reliably provided cataloging for nearly 4 decades. Yeah RLIN was great, except for the going bankrupt part and regular assessments to member libraries to keep its head above water in the years preceding its demise.
It's pretty naïve to imagine that all the infrastructure of OCLC should cost nothing or is worth nothing. It's a bit like thinking that driving is free vs tax subsidized public transit, until you remember that roads are constructed and maintained (or not) with tax money!
JJ
**Views expressed by the author do not necessarily represent those of the Queens Library.**
Jane Jacobs
Asst. Coord., Catalog Division
Queens Borough Public Library
89-11 Merrick Blvd.
Jamaica, NY 11432
tel.: (718) 990-0804
e-mail: Jane.W.Jacobs_at_queenslibrary.org
FAX. (718) 990-8566
The information contained in this message may be privileged and confidential and protected from disclosure. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, or an employee or agent responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by replying to the message and deleting it from your computer.-----Original Message-----
From: Next generation catalogs for libraries [mailto:NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Kyle Banerjee
Sent: Monday, March 08, 2010 11:58 AM
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: OCLC and Michigan State at Impasse Over SkyRiver Cataloging, Resource Sharing Costs
> I'm not quite sure what OAI-PMH would offer in this situation. The
> value-add of OCLC's shared cataloging is that it provides a searchable
> aggregated index of bibliographic records that, in turn, feeds an ILL
> service based on holdings (based on who has particular records).
The key word being holdings.
For many years, any library can avoid OCLC entirely and download
records from many sources using z39.50 or doing something clever with
data from public sources to create records. But this is a bad idea for
a couple of reasons.
There may be a lot of garbage in the WorldCat database, but as soon
as you start mining all these other sources, you'll see it's far more
reliable than the alternatives as a source of metadata. This increases
the time (i.e. cost) of getting a good record in the catalog.
More importantly, without a common control number (ISN's are highly
problematic for a number of reasons), keeping track of holdings
becomes much harder. It becomes WAY harder for libraries to work
together as consortia and resource sharing gets hosed fast. In short,
the only thing that libraries really have on the Amazons, Borders, etc
gets decimated.
As a membership organization, OCLC answers to its members. That means
that if something's screwed up, it falls upon us to help them fix it.
I realize OCLC moves far slower than many of us would like. But given
that libraries typically move at the speed of goo when it comes to
making small adjustments to local workflow, labeling, etc when only a
handful of individuals are involved, I'm not sure why we would expect
a different organization to work so much better.
kyle
--
----------------------------------------------------------
Kyle Banerjee
Digital Services Program Manager
Orbis Cascade Alliance
banerjek_at_uoregon.edu / 503.999.9787
Received on Mon Mar 08 2010 - 13:31:06 EST