Re: university of florida

From: Mike Ryan <MRyan_at_nyob>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 16:23:01 -0400
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
I'm confused............I've looked at the MARC record for the titles referenced here: http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/catmet/creativecommons.html but do not find a 588 tag.  Where is UF announcing the CC0 other than programmatically in Mango?

--Mike

Michael Ryan, Product Architect
College Center for Library Automation
1753 West Paul Dirac Drive
Tallahassee, FL 32310
850.922.6044


-----Original Message-----
From: Next generation catalogs for libraries [mailto:NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Peter Murray
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2011 12:50 PM
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [NGC4LIB] university of florida

It occurred to me when I read the 588 statement being inserted into records by the University of Florida that we might have seen this before:

On Mar 18, 2011, at 10:40 AM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
> 
> The following MARC 588 field (Source of Description Note) is
> added to new records contributed to WorldCat. It has not been
> added retrospectively to University of Florida original records
> in WorldCat.
> 
>   588::|a This bibliographic record is available under a
>   Creative Commons CC0 license. The University of Florida
>   Libraries, as creator of this bibliographic record, has
>   waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law,
>   including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent
>   allowed by law.

It is similar to the 996 field proposed by the withdrawn OCLC record use policy:

  996:: ‡aOCLCWCRUP ‡i Use and transfer of this record is
  governed by the OCLC® Policy for Use and Transfer of
  WorldCat® Records ‡u http://purl.org/oclc/wcrup

Does the application of a CC0 declaration on records uploaded to WorldCat have the same kind of viral effect as was proposed by OCLC?  I wonder --> http://dltj.org/article/cc0-marc-records/


Peter
-- 
Peter Murray         Peter.Murray_at_lyrasis.org        tel:+1-678-235-2955                 
Ass't Director, Technology Services Development   http://dltj.org/about/
Lyrasis   --    Great Libraries. Strong Communities. Innovative Answers.
The Disruptive Library Technology Jester                http://dltj.org/ 
Attrib-Noncomm-Share   http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ 
Received on Fri Mar 18 2011 - 16:23:19 EDT