The Information Professional
91
Librarians and Archivists in a fast-changing digital lanscape
Curated by Karen du Toit
Follow
Rescooped by Karen du Toit from Library Corner onto The Information Professional
Scoop.it!

Swedes Think Different: A New Model for E-lending

Swedes Think Different: A New Model for E-lending | The Information Professional | Scoop.it
In the case of e-book lending, the model that prevails in Sweden was drafted over a decade ago by representatives from the library sector and the Association of Swedish Publishers. Whilst the dominant model internationally is based on the idea of licensing ‘copies’ of e-books, in Sweden the library treats e-books as a ‘service’ with titles available concurrently to any number of patrons, for free. In Sweden you never have to wait for an e-book to become ‘available’ which of course means you can borrow as many as you want, simultaneously.
Via Miguel Mimoso Correia
No comment yet.
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Karen du Toit from Digital Delights - Digital Tribes
Scoop.it!

We Think, YouTube animation based on book by Charles Leadbeater

A new book by Charles Leadbeater, 'We Think' explores the potential of the latest developments of the internet...

 

> The Internet as enabler of mass innovation!

 

"We Think explores how the web is changing our world, creating a culture in which more people than ever can participate, share and collaborate, ideas and information.

Ideas take life when they are shared. That is why the web is such a potent platform for creativity and innovation.

It's also at the heart of why the web should be good for : democracy, by giving more people a voice and the ability to organise themselves; freedom, by giving more people the opportunity to be creative and equality, by allowing knowledge to be set free.

But sharing also brings with it dilemmas.

It leaves us more open to abuse and invasions of privacy.

Participation is not always a good thing: it can just create a cacophony.

Collaboration is sustained and reliable only under conditions which allow for self organisation.

Everywhere we turn there will be struggles between people who want to freely share - music, films, ideas, information - and those who want to control this activity, either corporations who want to make money or governments who fear debate and democracy. This conflict between the rising surge of mass collaboration and attempts to retain top down control will be one of the defining battles of our time, from Communist China, to Microsoft's battle with open source and the music industry's desperate rearguard action against the web."

 

First 3 chapters here (for free): http://www.wethinkthebook.net/home.aspx

 


Via Ana Cristina Pratas
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Karen du Toit from Curation, Social Business and Beyond
Scoop.it!

See the News Your Friends Are Reading via The New Yahoo / Facebook 'Facebar'

See the News Your Friends Are Reading via The New Yahoo / Facebook 'Facebar' | The Information Professional | Scoop.it

A logical and exciting way to share news with your friends,  just by clicking on their picture in your Facebar:

 

"Once a user opts into the service (via the new Facebook permissions screen), she will be able to see what news stories her friends have read on both Facebook and Yahoo News. This simple two-way stream of information makes it possible to discover news content through your friends."

 

If you read any news item in Facebook or Yahoo, click on the picture of one of your friends and see what they have been reading.  Brings News sharing into the 21st Century!

 

http://mashable.com/2011/09/22/facebook-yahoo-news/


Via janlgordon
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Karen du Toit from The Future Librarian
Scoop.it!

To Share Or Not To Share? - By Rick Anderson

To Share Or Not To Share? - By Rick Anderson | The Information Professional | Scoop.it

What is "sharing" between and among libraries?

 

"In the digital realm, what is typically referred to as “sharing” is actually copying—sometimes legal and sometimes not. Understandably, the ease and ubiquity of uncontrolled copying in a networked digital environment makes copyright holders uneasy. And the fuzzy line between copying and sharing in that environment also makes the question of what it means for libraries to “share” resources much more complicated than it might seem at first blush."

Should libraries share, or not?

 

"We don’t (or shouldn’t) share because 'sharing is what we do as libraries,' still less because sharing is somehow a 'core value' of librarianship. Sharing is a means, not an end. We share in order to provide access, and to the degree that 'sharing' actually means 'copying,' it is legally and ethically complicated."

 

"We live in a radically different information world from the one that gave rise to ILL. Instead of resisting that reality, we should embrace it, rejoicing in the ways it allows us to serve our patrons better."

 

Read more here:  http://lj.libraryjournal.com/2012/10/opinion/peer-to-peer-review/to-share-or-not-to-share-peer-to-peer-review/


Via Fe Angela M. Verzosa
No comment yet.