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Spring 1996 Meeting of the Coalition Task Force
Agenda
SPRING 1996 MEETING OF THE TASK FORCE
March 25-26, 1996
Renaissance Washington D.C. Hotel
999 9th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20001-9000
202-898-9000 (voice)
202-789-4213 (fax)
Theme
- The Networked Information User
Purposes
- To promote understanding of the characteristics and needs of the rapidly
growing and diversifying population of users of networks and networked
information.
- To provide an environment in which people associated with the Coalition
and
its Task Force can share experiences, visions, and plans.
- To provide an opportunity for people associated with the Coalition and its
Task Force to discuss network and networked information policy issues and
initiatives.
- To provide an opportunity for representatives of members of the Coalition
Task Force, leaders of the Coalition working groups, members of the Coalition
Steering Committee, and the Coalition CEOs to identify needs, to formulate
priorities, and to evaluate results.
Schedule for Monday March 25, 1996
11:00 am -- Registration and Refreshments [North Salon Foyer]
Cold drinks and light refreshments will be available.
11:30 am -- Meeting Overview for First-Time Attendees [North
Salon]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information, will provide first-time attendees with some background on the
Coalition and the meeting.
1:00 pm -- Call to Order and Welcome [North Salon]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information, will call the Meeting to order and make some general remarks on
the first six years of CNI and, in the parlance of the year, on "the road
ahead" for CNI.
1:30 pm -- Opening Plenary Session [North Salon]
John S. Quarterman, Secretary and Editor, Matrix Information and
Directory Services, will share his conception and measurements of the current
Internet and the rapidly evolving Global Information Infrastructure and its
user population, and Gary A. Puckrein, President, American Visions
Society, will discuss his views on the positive potential of the Internet in
particular and the information highway in general for African-Americans.
2:45 pm -- Break [North Salon Foyer]
3:15 pm -- Project Briefing Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
Assessing the Academic Networked Environment: Strategies and Options
[MR 2]
Charles R. McClure, Distinguished Professor, School of Information
Studies,
Syracuse University
This session will introduce the just published CNI manual Assessing the
Academic Networked Environment: Strategies and Options authored by
Charles
R. McClure and Cynthia L. Lopata from the School of Information Studies,
Syracuse University. McClure will provide an overview of the manual and its
contents, discuss the uses of the manual, and offer recommendations regarding
future work to be done in assessing academic networks.
An Overview of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 [MR 10]
Heather Boyles, Policy Analyst, FARNET (Federation of American Research
Networks)
This session will review the major provisions of the Telecommunications Act
of 1996, passed earlier this year, report on the immediate timetable for
implementation of its provisions, discuss coming changes within the industry,
and attempt to predict how the whole thing will affect users and providers of
communications services.
PURLs: Persistent Names for URLs [MR 15]
Terry Noreault, Director, Research & Special Projects, OCLC,
Inc.
There is an immediate need to establish a naming convention which can be used
to identify and locate resources on the Net. PURLs (Persistent Uniform
Resource Locators) have been developed and distributed by OCLC to address this
need. PURLs function like URLs for the Web client and are resolved using
redirection by a special HTTP PURL server. The briefing will discuss the
motivation for URNs, the PURL proposal, additional PURL services, and the PURL
server being distributed by OCLC.
Integrating Bibliographic Databases with Primary Journal Literature
[MR 13]
Peter Ciuffetti, Director of Corporate Development, SilverPlatter
Information, Inc.
This briefing describes the efforts of project "WILD Thing" at SilverPlatter
Information. Starting in November 1994, the authors developed a technology
architecture that enables the construction of sophisticated digital libraries.
We present here solutions we considered and deployed to address features not
provided by many current digital library technologies. These include: (1)
unification of the organization and presentation of content at the primary
(digital), primary (non-digital), and secondary levels; (2) tools to help
librarians establish organization among large collections of digital
artifacts;
(3) opportunities to exploit the richness of information encoded in SGML in
ways not achievable with HTML; (4) extensibility mechanism to support the
unique requirements of searching non-textual data; and, (5) features to enable
the distribution of commercial and non-commercial content among cooperating
domains. This briefing will focus on and demonstrate the first of these
solutions where we have taken steps to integrate primary and secondary
material. As time allows, it will also touch upon the other four aspects.
A Look on the Digital Horizon [MR 14]
Kelly L. Frey, Counsel and Director of Business Development, Copyright
Clearance Center
This session will overview Copyright Clearance Center's (CCC) networked
intellectual property rights management strategies, products, and services.
It
will also present information on related studies conducted and services
offered
by CCC. Open discussion of what CCC is doing and can do to assist all parties
in the rapidly developing marketplace for networked information resources and
services will be encouraged.
Columbia University Online Books Evaluation Project [MR 8]
Carol Mandel, Deputy University Librarian, Columbia University
David Millman, Manager, Research and Development, Academic Information
Systems, Columbia University
Mary Summerfield, Coordinator, Online Books Evaluation Project,
Columbia
University
Ursula Bollini, Electronic Publishing Coordinator, Oxford University
Press
Kate Wittenberg, Editor in Chief, Columbia University Press
In the Online Books Evaluation Project, Columbia University is assessing the
potential for online delivery of books to supplement or replace traditional
print books in research, teaching and learning. The three-year project,
supported by a grant from The Andrew Mellon Foundation, is examing users'
adoption of and responses to various counterparts, and implications of
intellectual property regulations and commercial traditions for the online
format. Reporting on the Project's start-up year, this briefing will describe
the evaluation methodologies designed for the project, the technical
environment developed to deliver materials and measure use (e.g. Web "session"
data, user data, etc.), and traditional books and expectations of online
books.
Consortium for the Computer Interchange of Museum Information (CIMI)
Cultural Heritage Information Online (CHIO) Project: Update on Z39.50
Application Profile for Cultural Heritage and SGML DTD for Museum Exhibition
Catalogs [MR 12]
John Perkins, CIMI Project Director, Computer Interchange of Museum
Information
Ray Denenberg, Senior Networked Engineer, Library of Congress
Robin Dowden, Collection Management Systems Administrator, National
Gallery
of Art
Steve Dietz, National Museum of American Art
CIMI has been working on Project CHIO, a demonstration project of the
application of SGML and Z39.50 to the online search and retrieval of museum
information. This session will review the work on a DTD for museum objects and
exhibition catalogues that allows comprehensive markup of catalogs, and the
Z39.50 application profile being written that will make them searchable.
AMICUS System Implementation at the National Library of Canada [MR
11]
Louis J. S. Forget, Director General, Information Technology Services,
National Library of Canada
Louis-Paul Normand, Director, Consulting Services, CGI
This session will discuss the large scale implementation of the new
Z39.50-based library management system using a relational and full text engine
at the National Library of Canada. The system, named AMICUS, is a
client-server based system and it was put in operation in June, 1995. The
AMICUS data base includes 11 million bibliographic records. The system is
used
by the National Library of Canada and the Canada Institute for Scientific and
Technical Information (CISTI) as well as a few federal libraries for searching
and cataloguing and by over 500 Canadian institutions who are members of our
Access AMICUS national database service.
4:30 pm -- Break [North Salon Foyer]
4:45 pm -- Project Briefing Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
The New NSF Program for High-Performance Connections to the Internet
[MR 2]
Mark Luker, Program Director, NSFNet, National Science Foundation
The present Internet is a great success by many measures, and it has led to
significant advances in research, access to information, publications, and
collaboration for research and education. It fails, however, to meet certain
emerging needs of research and higher education since it does not guarantee
the
"quality of service" required, for example, to view large images rapidly, to
control remote instrumentation in real time, or to reliably support human
teleconferencing. The National Science Foundation is updating its original
"Connections to the Internet" program to focus on quality of service for
advanced applications. It is hoped that this program will help to stimulate
the development of additional Internet services that better address the full
needs of research and education.
Interactive Data Service In Academic Libraries: The UVA Experience
[MR 10]
Patrick M. Yott, Coordinator, Social Sciences Data Services, University
of Virginia
Academic data centers have long supported instruction and research by
building collections of machine-readable numeric data. With the development
of
the WWW and associated programming tools, data centers now are capable of
serving an expanded clientele in new and exciting ways. Data centers can now
offer not only wider access, but more interactive access to numeric data.
This
briefing will discuss these potentialities within the context of efforts at
the
University of Virginia Social Sciences Data Center (SSDC).
State of NIDR in Colorado: ACLIN, BPL, Z39.50, DIPP & other
TLA's (Three-letter acronyms) [MR 15]
George H. Brett II, Consultant, Boulder Public Library, Colorado State
Library, ACLIN project, University of Colorado at Boulder
This briefing will present information about NIDR projects in the State of
Colorado that involve distributed networked information discovery and
retrieval. Some specific examples are the Access Colorado Library and
Information Network (ACLIN), the remote access imaging project, the
Distributed
Information Processing Protocol, Z39.50 and distributed information
environments, and all the above working in diversely aggregated environments.
A presentation summary will be made available online after the briefing
session.
The Electronic Journal on Excellence in College Teaching (EJECT): A
Libraries-initiated publishing venture [MR 13]
Judith Sessions, Dean and University Librarian, Miami University
Stacey Kimmel, Humanities/Social Sciences Reference Librarian, Miami
University
The Electronic Journal on Excellence in College Teaching (EJECT) project is
an ejournal project undertaken by the Miami University Libraries in
cooperation
with the Office for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching. This
electronic publication is produced using existing library staff and equipment.
The session will focus on the Libraries' role in the development of this
project and the strategies used to minimize costs and staff time. Other
topics
discussed will include collaboration with the Office of Scholarship and
Teaching, production costs (staff time and equipment), data collection on
usage
of articles, and future directions.
The Virtual Magistrate: A Pilot Project for Online Dispute Resolution
[MR 14]
David G. Post, Georgetown University Law Center and Cyberspace Law
Institute
The Virtual Magistrate is a pilot project for resolving disputes about online
postings through new, rapid-response, online arbitration. The pilot project
was convened by the Cyberspace Law Institute, with funding provided by the
National Center for Automated Information Research (NCAIR) and operational
support provided by the American Arbitration Association. The project's goals
are to (1) establish the feasibility of using online dispute resolution for
disputes that originate online; (2) provide system operators with informed and
neutral judgments on appropriate responses to complaints about allegedly
wrongful postings; (3) provide users and others with a rapid, low-cost, and
readily accessible remedy for complaints about online postings; (4) lay the
groundwork for a self-sustaining, online dispute resolution system as a
feature
of contracts between system operators and users and content suppliers (and
others concerned about wrongful postings); (5) help to define the reasonable
duties of a system operator confronted with a complaint; (6) explore the
possibility of using the Virtual Magistrate Project to resolve other dispute
related to computer networks; and (7) develop a formal governing structure for
an ongoing Virtual Magistrate operation.
The National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH), and the
American Arts and Letters Network (AALN) [MR 8]
David L. Green, Executive Director, National Initiative for a Networked
Cultural Heritage (NINCH)
Charles Henry, Director of Libraries, Vassar College
The National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH) was founded
out of a concern that the arts and humanities were being left behind as plans
for the National Information Infrastructure moved ahead. The NII has the
potential to provide direct and democratic access to our national cultural
resources not only for its guardians and scholars but also for the general
public. In turn, the NII will be a more dynamic place if there is a rich,
multimedia representation of our culture than if it is solely a structure for
business transactions or mass entertainment. NINCH will operate as a broad
coalition of organizations representing artists, contemporary arts groups,
libraries, museums, schools and universities, archives and learned societies.
It will act as a central clearinghouse of information about electronic
cultural
projects, as a resource for members in charting the way forward and as an
advocate in policy making circles for the importance of this initiative.
Two programs in support of NINCH's goals, the American Arts and Letters
Network (AALN) and the Two Ravens Institute-which, like NINCH, were initiated
through CNI-will also be described.
The WORLD 1 Online Information Service: A Progress Report [MR 12]
Kerry Webb, Director of Digital Library Projects, National Library of
Australia
The National Library of Australia together with the National Library of New
Zealand is developing a new online information service. WORLD 1 is the name
being given to the Australian service; the New Zealand service has not yet
been
named. The service will support the whole document supply cycle from the
creation and management of data to the search and delivery of information.
WORLD 1 is aimed at assisting libraries and individuals to obtain documents
when their local resources need to be supplemented. WORLD 1 will be
particularly relevant when the search for information needs to be broadened to
a nationwide or international search. The service will facilitate seamless
access to documents of all kinds, including print, multimedia and
electronic.
Senior University Administrators for Information Resources and
Technology Services [MR 11]
Arnold Hirshon, Vice Provost for Information Resources, Lehigh
University
During the past few years, some universities have been combining the
administrative responsibility for libraries, computing, and media services.
This session is specifically intended for senior university administrators who
are currently responsible for these merged operations to enable the
administrators to discuss management and administration issues related to
their
areas of operation. A specific topic of discussion will be the strategic
planning for and reorganization of, information resources organizations where
there are combined library and computing center operations.
6:00 pm -- Reception [East Salon]
Enjoy complimentary wine, beer, and soft drinks and a light buffet along with
the company of your fellow Meeting participants. A cash bar will also be
available.
Schedule for Tuesday, March 26, 1996
8:00 am -- Registration and Continental Breakfast [East Salon]
A breakfast buffet will be offered and attendees may choose to join a
Birds-of-a-Feather (BOF) table to discuss an issue or hot topic.
9:00 am -- Morning Plenary Session [North Salon]
Robert Weber, Senior Vice President, Electronic Publishing Resources,
will provide an overview of the rapidly developing networked intellectual
property rights management scene, and Peter Jaszi, Professor of Law,
Washington College of Law, American University, will present his views on the
equally rapidly developing networked intellectual property public policy
scene.
10:15 am -- Break [North Salon Foyer]
10:30 am -- Project Briefing Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
HighWire Press and Project Muse [MR 16]
Vicky Reich, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford University
Michael J. Jensen, Electronic Publisher, Johns Hopkins University
Press
Ellen Meserow Sauer, Co-manager, Project Muse, Johns Hopkins
University
Two electronic publishing projects will be presented: HighWire and Project
Muse. Consistent with Stanford's mission of creating and disseminating
knowledge, Stanford University Libraries and Academic Information Resources
(SUL/AIR) established the HighWire Press (http://highwire.stanford.edu) to
provide new models for publication of scholarly literature. These models
reflect changing ideas about who owns information and provide a means for
interactive communication among scientists that go beyond the one-way
publishing/broadcasting model. HighWire Press has co-published two important
scientific journals on the Internet, The Journal of Biological Chemistry,
and Science. The Press plans to put several more journals online
in
1996. For each new project, SUL/AIR establishes a partnership with a
scholarly
society. SUL/AIR acts as a systems integrator, bringing together faculty
scientists, librarians, technologists, and students. This new partnership
provides the opportunity to rethink models, not just recast old ones.
Universities and scientists can design services that fit the way they want to
work in the future.
Project Muse (http://muse.jhu.edu/), a collaborative project of the Johns
Hopkins University Press and the Milton S. Eisenhower Library, is an
initiative
to enable worldwide networked access to the full text of the over forty
journals published by the Press. Fourteen journals are currently available,
with an average of two new journals being added every month. The "domain
access" subscription model, in which the entire campus domain is given access
when its library subscribes (at less than the cost of paper subscriptions), is
a promising one for institutional access to publishers' content.
Campus Information Policy Issues [MR 5]
William H. Graves, Associate Provost, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Patricia A. Wand, University Librarian, American University
Anne S. Parker, Deputy Director, Office of Information Technology,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Sharon Hogan, University Librarian, University of Illinois at
Chicago
The current tumultuous social and regulatory climate surrounding the access
and use of networked electronic information resources encompasses a wide range
of issues including free speech, academic freedom, censorship, intellectual
property, and privacy. What are the important implications for campus
information policy and practice? Where and when are policies needed? What
strategies have campuses used in developing efficient and effective policies?
This session will consist of brief presentations on approaches to these
questions, a summary of the policies other campuses have adopted, and group
discussion.
Networked Intellectual Property: Rights Management and Public Policy
[MR 2]
Michelle Arden, Vice President, Marketing & Business Development,
Electronic Publishing Resources
Jeff Crigler, Vice President, IBM infoMarket
Kelly Frey, Counsel and Director of Business Development, Copyright
Clearance Center
Peter Jaszi, Professor of Law, Washington College of Law, American
University
Alistair Kelman, IMPRIMATUR Legal Consultancy
Mary Grace Smith, Principal, Northeast Consulting Resources
Robert Weber, Senior Vice President, Business and Technology Strategy,
Electronic Publishing Resources
Mary Grace Smith will lead a small group discussion on the issues raised and
the remarks made during Bob Weber's and Peter Jaszi's plenary session. In
addition to providing an opportunity for questions and comments to be directed
to the two plenary speakers, it will allow other voices to be heard on the
general subject of networked intellectual property rights management and
public
policy. In particular, Alistair Kelman will remark upon relevant European
efforts and developments, and Jeff Crigler, Kelly Frey, and Michelle Arden,
each of whom is leading a separate small group discussion of the networked
intellectual property rights management strategies, products, and services of
their respective firms, will briefly comment on the plenary session.
SOSIG -The Social Science Information Gateway: A Subject Approach to
Network Navigation [MR 3]
Nicky Ferguson, Director, Social Science Information Gateway,
University of
Bristol, Bristol
The Social Science Information Gateway (SOSIG) is the first of a series of
subject-based gateways under construction in the UK. Its aim is to provide
academic researchers and practitioners with easy access to networked resources
worldwide. The proliferation of networked resources is causing increasing
problems for users who wish to locate and retrieve relevant information. Most
are unwilling or simply do not have the time to learn to navigate through the
maze of information available. The Social Science Information Gateway (SOSIG)
aids the process of navigation by collecting and organizing valuable social
science resources available over the Internet. It also classifies and
describes them, and these descriptions, and associated keywords, form the
basis
of a searchable database.
SOSIG has been running for 18 months and is now piloting an approach, code
named ROADS, which is developing tools and a distributed, standards-based
platform for resource discovery systems. It will also be used as the
framework
for a number of other subject-based gateways. ROADS will allow the
subject-based resource discovery services to be located at the appropriate
centre of expertise, to be separately managed but to work within the same
framework and to be accessed by the users in an integrated way, thus allowing
cross-disciplinary searching and addressing the scaling problems which this
might otherwise cause.
Cost Centers and Measures Project in the Networked Information Value
Chain [MR 4]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition For Networked
Information
Mark A. Tesoriero, Market Research Account Executive, Robert Ubell
Associates
Robert N. Ubell, President, Robert Ubell Associates
The three main objectives for the "Cost Centers and Measures in the Networked
Information Value-Chain" project are:
- to produce a white paper on the value-chain of productive relations and
activities that link authors and readers in the scholarly and scientific
communication and publication system;
- to identify the value centers and cost categories that will experience the
greatest impacts due to the increased significance of networks and networked
information in the scholarly and scientific communication and publication
system; and,
- to formulate strategies for measuring those impacts over time.
At this project briefing, we will review the methodologies of the past
research (expert panels convened in New York), present the preliminary
findings
of the draft report, discuss the recommendations gathered from the panels, and
consider the next steps in moving the project forward.
Access to and Services for Federal Information in the Networked
Environment [MR 15]
Joan Cheverie, Head, Government Documents Department, Georgetown
University
and Visiting Program Officer, Coalition for Networked Information
Peter Graham, Associate University Librarian for Technical and
Networked
Information Services, Rutgers University
Joan Lippincott, Assistant Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information
Patrick Wilkinson, Director of Collection Management Services,
University
of Vermont
With the increasing use and availability of information technologies, there
has been a significant change in how federal agencies disseminate government
information. This change is resulting in new dissemination mechanisms, as
well
as new and changing user needs and expectations. As a result, the
responsibilities and capacities of institutions that facilitate the flow of
federal information to academic and civic communities need to be rethought in
this shifting environment. This session will update attendees on the
Coalition's white paper, "Access to and Services for Federal Information in
the
Networked Environment." This paper will guide higher education and other
institutions in the development of strategies for providing access to federal
information by their constituencies using the powerful and rapidly expanding
global information infrastructure.
Planning for Digital Archives [MR 13]
Ronald Larsen, Associate Director of Libraries for Information
Technology,
University of Maryland at College Park
Peter Hirtle, Policy & IRM Services, National Archives and Records
Administration
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and the University of
Maryland at College Park (UMCP), in collaboration with CNI, are sponsoring a
series of workshops beginning in the fall of 1996 to examine strategic issues
in the development of digital archives. Each workshop will bring together
leaders with specific expertise in the workshop topic, with the objective of
increasing shared knowledge of archives in an increasingly digital world. The
draft set of workshop topics includes:
- Access issues: Finding, accessing, & using archival materials
digitally;
- Security & Privacy: Balancing open systems, secure information, &
individual privacy;
- Conversion: Accommodating a world of mutable information &
information
sources; and,
- Architecture: Laying the foundation for a coherent system.
The purpose of this project briefing is to engage the CNI community in the
planning process for the workshop series, to refine the initial list of
workshop topics, and to identify individuals and organizations who have a
significant interest in participating
Levelling the Road Ahead: The Effective Use of Computers and Online
Information Systems by Persons with Visual and Physical Disabilities
[MR 14]
Judith M. Dixon, Consumer Relations Officer, National Library Service
for
the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress
This session will provide an overview of computer and network use by persons
with visual and physical disabilities. A demonstration of refreshable braille
and synthetic speech access will be provided as well as an in-depth discussion
of strategies for making online material accessible.
11:45 pm -- Circulation Break [North Salon Foyer]
12:00 pm -- Lunch [East Salon]
A buffet lunch will be offered and attendees may choose to join a
Birds-of-a-Feather (BOF) table to discuss an issue or hot topic.
1:00 pm -- Project Briefing Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
Using Networks to Build Bridges: Reaching Out To and In From The Black
Community [MR 16]
James Briggs Murray, Curator, Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division
and
Assistant Director, Media Productions and Theater Operations, Schomburg Center
for Research in Black Culture
Rosie Albritton, Assistant Professor, Wayne State University
E. David Ellington, Chief Executive Officer, NetNoir Inc.
Itabari Zulu, Director, Center for African American Studies Library,
University of California, Los Angeles
Gary Puckrein, President, American Visions Society
The progress and success of any community in the 21st century will depend
upon the ability of ALL of its citizenry to create and access computerized
information, to use electronic resources adroitly, and to translate these
skills successfully into applications beneficial to themselves and society.
If
Blacks are to be aptly represented as the electronic information
infrastructure
evolves, then they must contribute their share of content relating to the
African-American community. This session will discuss how black information
professionals and executives have taken proactive measures to ensure that the
black community is made aware of the positive potentiality of emerging
technology, both as consumers and producers. Particular attention will be
given to successful community partnerships, educational projects, and the
collaborative ventures of NetNoir Inc./America Online and the American
Visions
Magazine/CompuServ.
The JSTOR Project of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation [MR 5]
Kevin Guthrie, Mellon Foundation, JSTOR
Wendy Lougee, Assistant Director, Digital Library Initiatives,
University
of Michigan
The JSTOR (Journal Storage) Project, developed and sponsored by the Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation, is a large-scale undertaking to convert the backfiles of
journals into digital form and develop access tools which allow both full text
searching and indexed tables of contents. In its pilot phase, JSTOR has
focused on 10 journals in history and economics, but expansion is underway.
JSTOR is securing rights to additional titles, linking current issues to
backfiles in certain cases, and (later in 1996) developing an economic model
to
offer access to potentially hundreds of institutions. The presentation will
provide a description of the production process, system technologies, and
objectives of the project.
Enterprise-Wide Information Strategies: A Discussion of a New CNI
Initiative in the Making [MR 2]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information
CNI is preparing to undertake a new initiative to promote enterprise-wide
strategies in four key areas of networked information resource and service
development: hardware and software infrastructures; budgets; policies and
practices; and, managing staff and facilities. As a collaborative effort that
marshals the perspectives and experiences of a diverse group of institutions,
organizations, and professionals, the ultimate outcome of this initiative will
be a framework of shared ideas and language, what Peter Senge in his The
Fifth Discipline refers to as a "shared mental model," for formulating,
describing, and analyzing enterprise-wide networked information resource and
service strategies. The initiative will also produce a set of case studies
that will speak to the experiences and approaches of the individual
institutions, organizations, and professionals that participate in it.
Secure Electronic Commerce and Digital Rights Protection [MR 3]
Michelle Arden, Vice President, Marketing and Business Development,
Electronic Publishing Resources
Robert Weber, Senior Vice President, Business and Technology Strategy,
Electronic Publishing Resources
A vast amount of information, literature, video, images, and music is not yet
available in digital format, even though digital distribution and storage have
significant advantages for both providers and customers. The primary reason
is
the providers' concern that their intellectual property-if provided in digital
form-will be copied and redistributed uncontrollably without generating any
revenue after the initial sale. The future growth of electronic commerce
requires that creators, publishers, and distributors retain the same kind of
control in the electronic marketplace as they do in today's physical
marketplace. What is needed is a self-enforcing electronic rights management
system that is seamlessly integrated into the electronic marketplace and
persistently protects content without inhibiting its free flow.
Electronic Publishing Resources has pioneered electronic rights management
and has created the first such system, consisting of the DigiBox(tm) secure
container technology and the InterTrust(tm) distribution and event management
architecture. NetTrust(tm) 1.0 is the first EPR(tm) product line utilizing
the
DigiBox and InterTrust technologies.
IBM infoMarket: Rights Management Strategies, Products, and Services
[MR 4]
Jeff Crigler, Vice President, IBM infoMarket
This session will overview networked intellectual property rights management
strategies, products, and services of IBM infoMarket. Open discussion of what
IBM infoMarket is doing and can do to assist all parties in the rapidly
developing marketplace for networked information resources and services will
be
encouraged.
MESL Project Description [MR 15]
Jennifer Trant, Manager, Imaging Initiative, Getty Art History
Information
Program
Steve Dietz, National Museum of American Art
Gregory Welsh, Instructor, Computer Science & Information Systems
Department, American University
David Millman, Manager, Research & Development, Columbia
University
Howard Besser, Visiting Associate Professor, University of Michigan
The Museum Educational Site Licensing Project (MESL) brings representative
museums, colleges, and universities together to define the terms and
conditions
for educational use of museum images and information on campus-wide networks.
During this two-year collaboration, launched in 1995, sixteen selected
educational and cultural institutions are collaborating to agree on terms for
the capture, distribution, and use of digital images and their associated
texts. MESL participants are exploring and evaluating the educational benefits
of digital access to museum collections through campus networks.
Administrative, technical, and legal mechanisms are being developed and tested
to enable the future use of large quantities of high-quality museum images by
all educational institutions.
The Electronic Library of Delaware and The New Hampshire Automated
Information
System: Statewide Networking Strategies [MR 13]
Tom Sloan, State Librarian, Delaware State Library
James Cayz, Senior Librarian, Delaware State Library
Kendall F. Wiggin, State Librarian, New Hampshire State Library
Various states have differing strategies for meeting the needs of the
networked library user. This session will present two approaches being taken
by state libraries to network library resources within their respective
states.
The presenters will provide background on how each initiative came about,
examine technical and policy issues that arise in a statewide network, and
discuss the current status of their systems and future directions they are
headed.
The International Library School in Central and Eastern Europe: A Call for
Collaboration and Involvement [MR 14]
Maria Sliwinska, Deputy Director, University Library, University of
Torun,
Poland
Czeslaw Jan Grycz, Director, The Wladyslaw Poniecki Foundation,
University
of California Extension
Barbara Rodes, Library Consultant
The significant role of librarians in managing and harnessing the power of
distributed digital networks is well known to CNI Task Force members. That
role-in the context of developing economies and emerging democracies of the
Third World-is even more central than it is among technologically-advanced
nations. For this reason, the University of Torun, in Poland, is endeavoring
to establish a new form of "International Library School," which can act as an
efficient conduit of training, education, practical workshops, and online
support for practicing librarians from Third World and developing countries.
Already having received the support of the Ministry of Education and the
Council of University Rectors in Poland, the Mellon Foundation, the Soros
Foundation, the Poniecki Foundation in the U.S., and from universities and
libraries in the EU, the ILS now seeks active collaboration and partners from
among U.S. libraries and institutions to help flesh out appropriate curricula
and course requirements, provide guest and distance-delivered lectures, and
make available 4-week long internships for students enrolled in the ILS. This
briefing session will provide information about the current status of the
project, and the important opportunities available to Task Force members to
support a truly innovative and significant global outreach project.
2:15 pm -- Break [North Salon Foyer]
2:30 pm -- Closing Plenary Session [North Salon]
Kenneth C. Green, Visiting Scholar, The Claremont Graduate School,
will present some of the key findings of the 1995 National Survey of Desktop
in
Higher Education, with particular attention to what the survey has to say
about
the use of networks and the development and use of networked information
resources and services, and Karen R. Hitchcock, Interim President of
the
University at Albany of the State University of New York, will share her views
on higher education cultural transformations occasioned by the spread of
networks and networked information, with particular attention to the
implications for faculty development priorities and programs.
3:30 pm -- Meeting Adjourns
CNI
21 Dupont Circle Suite #800
Washington, DC 20036-1109
202.296.5098
<http://www.cni.org/>
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