Reminder:Invitation to attend KALA New Members Meet on Feb 6, 2009 (Friday) at 6.00 p.m.
Date: Fri, 6 Feb 2009 10:09:29 +0530 From: "Byrappa, Ananda (GE, Research)" <ananda.byrappa@ge.com> Dear All, We are glad to announce that KALA is organizing new members' meet. On behalf of KALA, I cordially invite you attend the same and make the meeting a productive one. The details of the meet: Event: KALA New Members' Meet Date: February 6, 2009 (Friday) Time: 6.00 p.m Venue: NCSI Seminar Hall, IISc, Bangalore the following two Special Lectures will be delivered during the meet: 1. Career Opportunities for LIS Professionals by Mr. N.V.Satyanarayana, Chairman and MD, Informatics India Ltd 2. Role LIS Professionals in promoting Library associations by Prof V.G Talwar, VC, Mysore Univ. Please confirm your participation by email to organize the event better Thanks, Ananda Byrappa General Secretary KALA
This new bill may significantly affect the growth of OA movement. Not a good news for OA enthusiasts. |N V Sathyanarayana|Managing Director|Informatics (India) Ltd|194, R V Road, Basavanagudi|Bangalore 560 004. INDIA|www.informindia.co.in|Phone +91-80-4038-7777|FAX +91-80-4038-7600| by Andrew Albanese -- Publishers Weekly, 2/4/2009 12:08:00 PM The Fair Copyright in Research Works bill, a controversial measure that would ban public access policies similar to those of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was reintroduced in Congress last night, after being shelved at the end of 2008. The bill resurfaces as proponents in the Association of American Publishers' (AAP) Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division holds its annual conference today in Washington, DC. Although the text of HR 801 has yet to be posted online, those who have seen it say it has much the same text as HR 6845, which was the subject of a spirited hearing <http://www.libraryjournal.com/info/CA6595597.html?nid=2673> held before a Congressional subcommittee last year. In a statement, AAP officials praised the bill's reintroduction, and said the legislation "would help keep the Federal Government from undermining copyright protection for journal articles." The library community, however, strongly opposses the measure. If passed, the bill would essentially bar agencies of the federal government from requiring the transfer of copyright, whole or in part, as a condition for receiving public funding. That would prohibit measures like the recently enacted NIH public access policy, which requires investigators who accept taxpayer funds to deposit their final papers in the PubMed Central repository and give the agency a non-exclusive right to offer free access within a year. Within hours of last year's dramatic hearing <http://www.libraryjournal.com/info/CA6595597.html?nid=2673>, lawmakers all but ruled out action on the bill in 2008. In comments after the hearing, however, Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), lashed out at the House Appropriations Committee, which passed the public access mandate as part of an omnibus spending bill in 2007. Conyers told CongressDaily <http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0908/091208cdam1.htm> that he was frustrated by the Appropriations Committee's refusal to engage repeated questions from the House Judiciary Committee, which Conyers chairs, about the copyright and intellectual property implications associated with the NIH mandate. He fumed that appropriators acted "summarily, unilaterally and probably incorrectly" in enacting the mandate, and suggested the mandate was at the center of a Congressional turf war, saying Appropriations had encroached on his committee's "sacred turf." -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
participants (2)
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Francis Jayakanth -
Sathya