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Could this be what's happened in your situation? I know that a lot of students (and indeed, faculty members and advisors) aren't aware of it, and aren't in the habit of reading ProQuest's agreement carefully. Paige --------------------- Meeting/regular work hours: Monday - Thursday, 9am-5pm; limited email on Friday mornings. |
Dr. Paige C. Morgan (she/her/they)Digital Publishing and Copyright Librarian, Head of Digital Initiatives & Preservation University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press (on Lenape land) Morris 118 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8076-7356 pai...@udel.edu 302.831.7153 Make an appointment to meet with me: https://calendly.com/paigecm/ (Meetings available via Zoom, phone, etc.) ** I observe email-free evenings and weekends. ** |
This Agreement is between the author (Author) and ProQuest LLC, through its ProQuest® Dissertation Publishing business (ProQuest). Under this Agreement, Author grants ProQuest certain rights to preserve, archive and publish the dissertation or thesis, abstract, and index terms (the Work) provided by Author to ProQuest.
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ProQuest® Publishing Program - Election and Elements. The rights granted above shall be exercised according to the publishing option selected by Author on the previous Publishing Options screen, and subject to the following additional Publishing Program requirements:
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--------------------- Meeting/regular work hours: Monday - Thursday, 9am-5pm; limited email on Friday mornings. |
Dr. Paige C. Morgan (she/her/they)Digital Publishing and Copyright Librarian, Head of Digital Initiatives & Preservation University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press (on Lenape land) Morris 118 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8076-7356 pai...@udel.edu 302.831.7153 Make an appointment to meet with me: https://calendly.com/paigecm/ (Meetings available via Zoom, phone, etc.) ** I observe email-free evenings and weekends. ** |
Nothing can completely prevent it. Putting it behind a login or not digitising it at all would make it harder, but then it’s not so available to the general public at all which is counterproductive. Theoretically some kind of DRM might help but I don’t believe that’s a feature of DSpace.
So it comes down to responding to it: lay a complaint with Amazon / whatever other sites are hosting the content. Any otherwise legitimate site should have a DMCA/other takedown process. How the student (as copyright holder) phrases the complaint will depend on what, if any, licence the item has:
They’re also not allowed to add any technological measures that restrict others from doing anything the licence permits.
So if they’ve missed out any of that information, or if they or Amazon have added any DRM, then they’re still in breach of the licence.
Deborah
From: dspace-c...@googlegroups.com <dspace-c...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Yvonne
Sent: Thursday, 4 May 2023 5:59 am
To: Paige Morgan <pai...@udel.edu>
Cc: DSpace Community <dspace-c...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [dspace-community] Copyright infringement on theses and dissertations
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Hi all,
I think most of this has been stated, but I did run this by one of our copyright experts, Matthew Kopel and he provided the information below which echoes much of what has been shared. Matthew asked me to make sure to mention that he’s a librarian and not a lawyer, and that this is information and not legal advice. For legal advice, he suggests you take the issue to your institution’s counsel.
““If the author placed a license on the work that does not prohibit commercial use (e.g. a CC-BY instead of a CC-BY-NC), anyone can grab it and sell it.
Similarly, works deposited in HathiTrust or the Internet Archive that are in the public domain (and don’t have restrictions on the scans e.g. Google scans) are frequently repackaged and sold.
In the scenario below, if the license applied by the author was not an open license allowing for commercial use, the rightsholder would have grounds to issue a DMCA takedown request. Whether the institution can do this on behalf of the author depends on the nature of the repository license.”
Best,
Erica
Erica M. Johns
Lead Librarian for the eCommons Institutional Repository Service
Cornell University Library
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I’m Austin McLean and work at ProQuest, a part of Clarivate and want to clarify our position.
If you have any further questions, please feel free to reach out to me.
Thank you.
Austin
Austin McLean He/Him/His
Senior Director, Partnerships
M: +1-734-646-6830, Time zone: EST
ProQuest
Part of Clarivate
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