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pavioli

Writing History in the Digital Age - 0 views

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    How can today's digital revolution and collaborative social networking transform how we write our histories of the past?
Kevin Stranack

Can Libraries Help Stop this Madness? | Peer to Peer Review - 0 views

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    "Instead of calling for more money to prop up a traditional model that was never particularly viable in the first place, we need to embrace a variety of alternatives. Academic librarians are well positioned to lead the way here, both because of their long history of managing change and because they often hold the purse strings."
mbittman

Top 8 Social Media Tools To Publish Like A Marketing Pro - 8 views

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    This site opens more doors to using social media tools and explains what they are and how you can connect using the various tools. These tools are making history by showing us new ways to publish our own work(s).
mbittman

40 Powerful Photos Show Why Banksy Is the Spokesman of Our Generation - Mic - 2 views

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    In a short time, Banksy has become a cultural icon with a distinct place in history. [Publishing the story through art.]
Jamie F

Copyright Law in Canada: An Introduction to the Canadian Copyright Act - 0 views

A good reference for those who are exploring 'intellectual property' law, especially in Canada. This page covers Canada's history with The Copyright Act and its many revisions. http://www.maplelea...

#copyright #law #knowledge #module5 #protection #publicgood #MOOC

started by Jamie F on 21 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
Amanda Hill

Macaulay Library - 1 views

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    "The Macaulay Library is the world's largest and oldest scientific archive of biodiversity audio and video recordings. Our mission is to collect and preserve recordings of each species' behavior and natural history, to facilitate the ability of others to collect and preserve such recordings, and to actively promote the use of these recordings for diverse purposes spanning scientific research, education, conservation, and the arts." A great example of what citizen science can build!
christofhar

MathTV - Math Videos and Online Books based on math and algebra texts by Charles P. McK... - 1 views

shared by christofhar on 23 Oct 14 - No Cached
anonymous and pad123 liked it
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    About MathTV Our History The current version of MathTV.com was started in 2008. That summer, Mr. McKeague hired six of his students to help him proofread and error check a college algebra book he was working on. Because of the extremely positive attitude of his students toward improving the book they were proofreading, Mr. McKeague decided to see how the students would do in the studio. With a little coaching they actually did very well. In 2009, we started adding online versions of three of Mr. McKeague's textbooks to the website, and experimenting with building an online homework system. In 2010 we published the first print versions of those textbooks with our new publishing company XYZ Textbooks, and we officially launched our online homework and gradebook software with XYZ Homework. As of now over 80 schools use our books.
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    It's great idea to start MathTV.com. I will show to my kids too
salma1504

The history of the University Press - 0 views

the university presses in the United States were by and large founded specifically for the publication of scholarship; in this sense, as Thompson points out, "they were generally seen as an integra...

module5

started by salma1504 on 01 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
mark Christopher

That Thing - The Napster phenomenon - 2 views

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    Published on Dec 30, 2012 Short programme, produced in the year 2000, on the emergence of a technology called Napster, the file sharing software application that revolutionised music distribution world-wide.
Julia Echeverría

Hackers pull off 'world's biggest' data heist - 0 views

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    Hi, there I think that we must talk about this issue, is very important to know more about it. Russian hackers have pulled off what is possibly the largest cyber security breach in history, stealing 1.2 billion usernames and passwords and more than 500 million email addresses, security experts say. More than 420,000 websites, including large, well-known sites as well as smaller companies, were targeted by a cybercrime ring dubbed Cybervor.
veronicasoledad

Recuso para descarga de colecciones digitales - 0 views

Omeka ha sido desarrollado por el Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media de la Universidad George Mason responsables también del gestor bibliográfico Zotero. Se trata de una plataforma interop...

open access module4 publishing

started by veronicasoledad on 26 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
dudeec

DPLA: Digital Public Library of America - 0 views

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    While attending another work-related webinar, I heard about this web site and thought about this class. On the surface, this site looks like a portal to many, many other image and video repositories about the history and geography of the United States. Many are contributed by local public libraries, museums, archives, and historical societies. What caught my attention and connect to this course is that all the metadata of the repositories are open access, so that developers can take advantages of the metadata and create additional apps. In this sense, this site becomes a platform. The contents from the various repositories have different degrees of rights and restrictions for reuse, some are under CC, some are protected by copyright, but the metadata is all open!
Francisco Reveles

History of Copyright: Statute of Anne, 1710 - 3 views

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    Facsimile and transcription of the document cited by John Willinsky in Module 5's video lecture.
Hattie Cobb

Global Futures Studies & Research by The Millennium Project - 2 views

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    Super interesting area. I worked this topic into a presentation on educational innovation as one of the leaders in its directionality and its success.
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    tell me more about...I'm a sociologist and how we shape today we make the history of tomorrow...
Aruna Maruthi

Intellectual Properties : History - 1 views

Links to Additional resources that show a brief glimpse of IP down the ages http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/7175/9/09_chapter%205.pdf http://www.slideshare.net/lalitambastha/evol...

Module 5

started by Aruna Maruthi on 27 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
ibudule

As Libraries Go Digital, Sharing of Data Conflicts With Tradition of Privacy - Technolo... - 6 views

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    Perhaps a bit narrow, but relevant to me. The article touches upon some aspects of privacy and openness bothering librarians. On the one hand people themselves are sharing lots of information about their reading lists, reading habits and favorites. On the other hand, libraries are trying to preserve patrons' privacy and protect their privacy from unwanted eyes.
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    This is very interesting, for once compiling the reading preferences of a user can help others researching or interested on the same topic access useful resources more easily. At the same time, this can be used to bias the reader towards a particular resource. Also it prompts the issue of profiling people for what they read.
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    This was a very interesting piece. I'd not heard of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab. Fascinating. Thanks for sharing. Libraries do indeed need to give much to benefit from collaborative tools. Love the Faustian Pact description. So true.
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    Gracias por compartirlo. Trabajo en una biblioteca universitaria y estoy interesada en la temática de innovación bibliotecaria.
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    I enjoyed this reading very much, thanks! Not to spoil the end, but it is a good comment that in order to protect the patrons' privacy, they must do their part too. If they use machines that requires to log in to Amazon, for example (I don't own a Kindle so I don't know it that is true), well, libraries cannot protect their privacy on what they are reading. Which reinforce the idea of the role that libraries should play in educating people about online privacy. the example of combining books that were borrowed by the same person that allows to identify the patron is very powerful and shows how something that looks innocent like a list of borrowed books can be harmful.
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    I think this article really demonstrates how the meaning of libraries is constantly in flux, and in recent decades has been evolving quicker than it has in perhaps the past couple of centuries. But the library has always been evolving, first mostly accessible to academics and eventually democratizing its mission by bringing literacy to the masses with public libraries. Now we are evolving to decide how open and social the patron habits should be. I think there is a way that libraries can adapt to this change and incorporate ways for patron data to inform the collection and recommendations, but also give patrons the option of being completely private, perhaps similar to an "incognito" browser window. Ultimately, the library should take privacy seriously and give patrons options that do not deceive. Thanks for sharing!
rogergsweden

The surprising history of copyright - by Google - 4 views

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    The story of copyright, beginning with the printing press.
fraup74

Free Online Textbooks, Flashcards, Practice, Real World Examples, Simulations | CK-12 F... - 0 views

shared by fraup74 on 14 Oct 14 - Cached
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    CK-12 Foundation provides a library of free online textbooks, videos, exercises, flashcards, and real world applications for over 5000 concepts from arithmetic to history
hreodbeorht

Digital Medievalist - 2 views

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    Medievalists are often considered, like their subject matter, a stodgy old-fashioned bunch who are the vanguard of old academia. But there are a few exceptions, like the Digital Medievalist site. Open to scholars and enthusiasts of varying skills and experience, it runs a long-standing open-access journal, a small wiki dealing mostly with aspects of the digital humanities, and a list of important news and upcoming conferences for professional scholars. Overall it's a great place for those interested in what's going on in the medieval academy. It's not perfect, though: the journal only publishes a handful of papers each year, and most of the rest of the content isn't very expansive. It feels like, and probably is, a side-project that a few scholars work on in their free time rather than the comprehensive resource it could be; and that makes it a cautionary tale. If we freely offer only the barest bones of what constitutes a journal (or any other scholarly resource), we run the risk of presenting open access as an inferior model that can only take readers so far. It's important to remember that open access takes real sustained effort to make it a viable alternative to traditional models of scholarly publishing.
Aruna Maruthi

Finding CC-Licensed Works - 1 views

Europeana : http://www.europeana.eu/ for cc multimedia Community Audio : https://archive.org/details/opensource_audio Noun Project. http://thenounproject.com/ Few sites for...

Tools Images module4 open License

started by Aruna Maruthi on 25 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
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