"Synthesis of Working Group and Interest Group Activity One Year into the Research Data Alliance"

Beth Plale has published "Synthesis of Working Group and Interest Group Activity One Year into the Research Data Alliance" in D-Lib Magazine.

Here's an excerpt:

The Research Data Alliance (RDA) uses Working Groups and Interest Groups to carry out its work. Groups form when a concerned community develops around a topic for which there are well defined issues, common goals, and an opportunity to create a framework for timely action. One year in, RDA has 26 Working Groups and Interest Groups whose activities are focused on overcoming barriers to successful research data sharing, publishing, referencing and archiving, and on developing the infrastructure necessary to support those tasks.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Digital Curation News (1/15/2014) #digitalpreservation

Digital Scholarship | Digital Curation News

Net Neutrality, RIP?

While it could be appealed, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit's Verizon v. FCC ruling may well be the death knell of net neutrality given that an unfavorable Supreme Court ruling could make the situation worse by eliminating its last legal vestiges.

What now? In my 1996 "Strong Copyright + DRM + Weak Net Neutrality = Digital Dystopia?" paper, I had this to say about the prospects of net neutrality's demise:

There are many unknowns surrounding the issue of Net neutrality, but what is clear is that it is under assault. It is also clear that Internet services are more likely to require more, not less, bandwidth in the future as digital media and other high-bandwidth applications become more commonplace, complex, and interwoven into a larger number of Internet systems.

One would imagine that if a corporation such as Google had to pay for a high-speed digital lane, it would want it to reach as many consumers as possible. So, it may well be that libraries' Google access would be unaffected or possibly improved by a two-tier (or multi-tier) Internet "speed-lane" service model. Would the same be true for library-oriented publishers and vendors? That may depend on their size and relative affluence. If so, the ability of smaller publishers and vendors to offer innovative bandwidth-intensive products and services may be curtailed.

Unless they are affluent, libraries may also find that they are confined to slower Internet speed lanes when they act as information providers. For libraries engaged in digital library, electronic publishing, and institutional repository projects, this may be problematic, especially as they increasingly add more digital media, large-data-set, or other bandwidth-intensive applications.

It's important to keep in mind that Net neutrality impacts are tied to where the choke points are, with the most serious potential impacts being at choke points that affect large numbers of users, such as local ISPs that are part of large corporations, national/international backbone networks, and major Internet information services (e.g.,Yahoo!).

It is also important to realize that the problem may be partitioned to particular network segments. For example, on-campus network users may not experience any speed issues associated with the delivery of bandwidth-intensive information from local library servers because that network segment is under university control. Remote users, however, including affiliated home users, may experience throttled-down performance beyond what would normally be expected due to speed-lane enforcement by backbone providers or local ISPs controlled by large corporations. Likewise, users at two universities connected by a special research network may experience no issues related to accessing the other university's bandwidth-intensive library applications from on-campus computers because the backbone provider is under a contractual obligation to deliver specific network performance levels.

Although the example of speed lanes has been used in this examination of potential Net neutrality impacts on libraries, the problem is more complex than this, because network services, such as peer-to-peer networking protocols, can be completely blocked, digital information can be blocked or filtered, and other types of fine-grained network control can be exerted.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Digital Production Librarian at Harry Ransom Center

The Harry Ransom Center is recruiting a Digital Production Librarian (term ends on 2/28/2015).

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

To create and manage the digital production for a one year project to digitize, process and make available Ransom Center archival collections via the Ransom Center digital asset management system, CONTENTdm.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

"10 Simple Rules for the Care and Feeding of Scientific Data"

Alyssa Goodman et al. have self-archived "10 Simple Rules for the Care and Feeding of Scientific Data" in arXiv.org.

Here's an excerpt:

This article offers a short guide to the steps scientists can take to ensure that their data and associated analyses continue to be of value and to be recognized. In just the past few years, hundreds of scholarly papers and reports have been written on questions of data sharing, data provenance, research reproducibility, licensing, attribution, privacy, and more, but our goal here is not to review that literature. Instead, we present a short guide intended for researchers who want to know why it is important to "care for and feed" data, with some practical advice on how to do that.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Senior Preservation Software & Systems Engineer at University of Virginia Library

The University of Virginia Library is recruiting a Senior Preservation Software & Systems Engineer.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

The Academic Preservation Trust is looking for highly motivated and talented Software Engineer to help build an aggregate preservation repository serving a broad community of Universities nationwide.

The Senior Preservation Software & Systems Engineer takes a leading role in the design and creation of custom software to process, preserve and manage Digital Objects from partner institutions within the APTrust Aggregate repository and the Digital Preservation Network (DPN) dark archive. Working closely with a small development team, partner Universities and the Tech Lead, the Senior Preservation Software & Systems Engineer will identify and implement effective solutions to create a trusted digital preservation system to ensure the durability and recovery of vital scholarly content

.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

Net Neutrality: ALA Issues Statement on U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Verizon v. FCC Ruling

ALA has issued a statement by Barbara Stripling on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Verizon v. FCC ruling.

Here's an excerpt:

The court's decision gives commercial companies the astounding legal authority to block Internet traffic, give preferential treatment to certain Internet services or applications, and steer users to or away from certain web sites based on their own commercial interests. This ruling, if it stands, will adversely affect the daily lives of Americans and fundamentally change the open nature of the Internet, where uncensored access to information has been a hallmark of the communication medium since its inception.

Public libraries have become leading providers of public Internet access, providing service to millions of students, elderly citizens, people seeking employment and many others every single day. Approximately 77 million people use public library Internet access every year. These users of libraries' Internet services, and people all across the country, deserve equal access to online information and services.

The ability of the Internet to spread and share ideas is only getting better. With modern technology, individuals and small groups can produce rich audio and video resources that used to be the exclusive domain of large companies. We must work to ensure that these resources are not relegated to second-class delivery on the Internet—or else the intellectual freedoms fostered by the Internet will be seriously constrained. ALA will work with policy-makers and explore every avenue possible to restore the long-standing principle of nondiscrimination to all forms of broadband access to the Internet.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Scientific Research Data Librarian at National Institute of Standards and Technology

The National Institute of Standards and Technology is recruiting a Scientific Research Data Librarian.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

The selectee will serve as a Scientific Research Data Librarian to identify strategies for understanding and responding to the evolving research data service needs of NIST researchers. In partnership with ISO's Digital Services Librarian, the selectee will assist NIST researchers formulate data management plans, and prepare data for publication, reporting, and repository ingest. The selectee will identify and recommend tools,techniques, and practices for management of research data throughout its lifecycle. The selectee will also monitor, investigate, and report on emerging trends, best practices, and technologies in digital data stewardship, e-science, scholarly publishing, and open access.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

"Supporting Public Access to Research Results"

P. Scott Lapinski, David Osterbur, Joshua Parker and Alexa T. McCray have published "Supporting Public Access to Research Results" in College & Research Libraries.

Here's an excerpt:

We posed the question of what services an academic library can best provide to support the NIH Public Access Policy. We approached the answer to this question through education, collaboration, and tool-building. As a result, over the last four years we have engaged over 1,500 participants in discussions of public access to research results, forged alliances with dozens of partners, and built online tools to ease the process of complying with the NIH policy. We conclude that librarians working in collaboration with other key constituencies can have a positive impact on improving access to the results of scientific research.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Web Developer at Princeton University Library

The Princeton University Library is recruiting a Web Developer.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

This position will work as a member of the Systems Office team that supports and develops the library's web sites and web applications.

As a participant in the continued development and support of our Library-wide Drupal environment, our discovery systems, and our resource sharing systems, the incumbent will work with other developers, small teams of librarians, archivists, and curators to design and develop sites and applications to serve our departmental libraries, collections, and exhibitions.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

"Developing Humanities Collections in the Digital Age: Exploring Humanities Faculty Engagement with Electronic and Print Resources"

Sarah Buck Kachaluba, Jessica Evans Brady, and Jessica Critten have published "Developing Humanities Collections in the Digital Age: Exploring Humanities Faculty Engagement with Electronic and Print Resources" in College & Research Libraries.

Here's an excerpt:

This article is based on quantitative and qualitative research examining humanities scholars' understandings of the advantages and disadvantages of print versus electronic information resources. It explores how humanities' faculty members at Florida State University (FSU) use print and electronic resources, as well as how they perceive these different formats. It was carried out with the goal of assisting the authors and other librarians in choosing between electronic and print formats when performing collection development responsibilities.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap

Digital Curation News (1/13/2014) #digitalpreservation

Digital Scholarship | Digital Curation News

Assistant Dean for Scholarly Communications and Collection Development at Colorado State University Libraries

The Colorado State University Libraries are recruiting an Assistant Dean for Scholarly Communications and Collection Development.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

  • Oversees the College Liaisons and Collections units (8 faculty librarians and 3 staff) and works with the unit coordinators to develop and carry out strategic initiatives; manages an annual collections budget of $7 million and a collection of more than 2 million volumes. Negotiates contracts with vendors and consortia on behalf of the Libraries. . . .
  • Cultivates and promotes new and progressive models of scholarly communication and collection development, including open access, demand-driven acquisitions, and data management. . . .
  • Promotes alternative publishing models and consults on author rights. Provides support to librarians engaged in activities related to scholarly communication, open access, and copyright.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

Digital Project Manager at University of California, Berkeley Library

The University of California, Berkeley Library is recruiting a Digital Project Manager.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

This position will be both project manager and producer of digital images. They will be working on digital projects from conception to implementation, including the creation of digital images, working with vendors, etc.

  • Project management of multiple small to medium digital projects.
  • Produce and review statistics to inform decision relating to digital collections.
  • Document, analyze, and communicate about problems and enhancement requests.
  • Maintain existing digital projects.
  • Perform digital image capture from a range of Library materials to very exacting standards, consistently and productively, using advanced equipment and techniques.
  • Handle rare and or fragile originals skillfully to prevent damage.
  • Organize and inspect captured image files, and deliver files and related technical metadata to next
  • stage of workflow.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

Open Access Publishing Manager, Libraries at Indiana University’s Office of Scholarly Publishing

Indiana University's Office of Scholarly Publishing is recruiting a Open Access Publishing Manager.

Here's an excerpt from the ad:

Manages daily operations of Open Access Publishing Services, including IUScholarWorks repository, Open Folklore, and Archive-It web archiving service. Consults with researchers who want to deposit their materials into the repository about metadata, basic intellectual property policies, preservation, and technical considerations. Manages ongoing open access projects; tracks usage data and writes reports; and manages batch imports and other technical tasks.

Manages the public web presence of Open Access Publishing services; serves as technical liaison to system developers in the Libraries; and creates and maintains ongoing priority lists for functional improvements. Provides advice and technical assistance to IU researchers and editors on open access journal publishing; and consults with, and trains colleagues from other IU campuses on open access journal publishing and other forms of scholarly publishing.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Library Jobs | Library IT Jobs | Sitemap

Transforming Peer Review Bibliography

Digital Scholarship has released the Transforming Peer Review Bibliography, which includes selected English-language articles that are useful in understanding significant transformations to the peer review process.

It is concerned with major changes to peer review, such as open peer review (excluding just revealing the identity of traditional peer reviewers) and post-publication review.

Most sources have been published from January 2010 through December 2012; however, a limited number of earlier key sources are also included. The bibliography includes links to freely available versions of included works. If such versions are unavailable, italicized links to the publishers' descriptions are provided.

It is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Publications Overview | Sitemap