Archive for May, 2009

New Publication: Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From the Document:

This document is a code of best practices that helps creators, online providers, copyright holders, and others interested in the making of online video interpret the copyright doctrine of fair use. Fair use is the right to use copyrighted material without permission or payment under some circumstances.

This is a guide to current acceptable practices, drawing on the actual activities of creators, as discussed among other places in the study Recut, Reframe, Recycle: Quoting Copyrighted Material in User-Generated Video and backed by the judgment of a national panel of experts. It also draws, by way of analogy, upon the professional judgment and experience of documentary filmmakers, whose own code of best practices has been recognized throughout the film and television businesses.

Source: Center for Social Media @ American University

+ See Also: The Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education

+ See Also: Fair Use in Media Literacy Education FAQ

+ See Also: Fair Use Frequently Asked Questions

+ See Also: Radio Berkman Interview with Patricia Aufderheide, Director of the Center for Social Media

Watch TV Online? Check out the New Hulu Labs

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Hulu Labs is now live online. At the moment four “experimental” services are listed.

1) Hulu Desktop

Hulu Desktop is a lean-back viewing experience for your personal computer. It features a sleek new look that’s optimized for use with standard Windows Media Center remote controls or Apple remote controls, allowing you to navigate Hulu’s entire library with just six buttons. For users without remotes, the application is keyboard and mouse-enabled. Hulu Desktop is a downloadable application and will work on PCs and Macs. It will initially launch as a beta product during which we plan to gather and incorporate user feedback to improve the service.

2) Video Panel Designer

Video Panels are easy-to-use embeddable widgets that allow simple content programming and easily integrate a Hulu video player. The Video Panel Designer tool helps site editors and Web masters customize and program Video Panels to fit their needs.

3) Recommendations

Recommendations are a list of TV shows and movies that we think you’ll love based on videos you’ve already watched and rated on Hulu. Anyone with a Hulu account can access these recommendations: log in or sign up for a free account and select the Recommendations tab found on your Profile page.

4) Time-Based Browsing

Time-Based Browsing allows you to quickly scan our videos grouped by original air date. Whether you’re a TV junkie who remembers shows by the day of week they air, a budding media anthropologist curious to study TV’s evolution across the decades, or just a user in search of timely news clips, time-based browsing is another way to easily find more videos on Hulu.

See Also: Hulu Labs Now Live: Recommendations, Time-Based Browsing, And More (via TechCrunch)

Profile: Building and Sustaining the Knowledge Culture: Susan Fifer Canby Puts Theory into Practice at the National Geographic Society

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From the Introduction:

In the knowledge culture, all persons affiliated with the organization understand and accept their responsibilities for knowledge development and knowledge sharing (now generally characterized with the “KD/KS” acronym), and at the National Geographic Society in Washington, DC the organizational knowledge culture is much in evidence. This iconic scientific and publishing institution vcould well be said to epitomize the concept of the knowledge culture, and much of that success has had to do with the leadership of Susan Fifer Canby, the society’s enthusiastic and talented Vice- President for Libraries and Information Services. With management and service delivery responsibility for ensuring that KD/KS is practiced at the highest levels of excellence, Fifer Canby’s success in this work is well known and serves as a model for many in the KM/knowledge services field.

Direct to Full Text (6 pages; PDF)

Source: SMR International

Stats: How Canadians Spend Their Time Online

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From a Blog Post by Heather Hopkins:

We recently launched Hitwise Canada and in my first post using our Canadian data, I wanted to take a high level view of what my fellow Canadians are doing online and how that compares to their US and UK counterparts. The largest category in Canada, based on share of Internet visits is Search Engines. Hitwise categorises websites into over 165 industry categories. Search Engines came out on top, capturing 14.58% of Canadian Internet visits in April, followed by Social Networking and Forums and Entertainment.

Direct to Post and Chart

Source: Hitwise

Cool and Useful: Search Clouds on MedlinePlus

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From a National Library of Medicine Post:

On April 22, 2009, NLM introduced search clouds in English for MedlinePlus and in Spanish for MedlinePlus en español. The search clouds display the top 100 searches from each site and are updated each week day. The search terms appear in alphabetical order, with the size representing the relative frequency (see Figure 1). The bigger the term, the more often it is searched by people who visit MedlinePlus or MedlinePlus en español. A term’s exact ranking is found by placing the cursor over the term. By simply clicking on a term in the cloud, users can conduct a search for that term in MedlinePlus. A term’s exact ranking is found by placing the cursor over the term. The search clouds are linked from the MedlinePlus and MedlinePlus en español homepages.

+ Direct to English Language Search Cloud

+ Direct to Spanish Language Search Cloud

Source: NLM

Text a Librarian at ALA in Chicago

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From a SLJ Article:

ALA has partnered with Mosio to maximize the conference experience by offering mobile information through a service called “Text an ALA Ambassador.” And with an estimated 25,000 librarians and information professionals expected to show up, there are bound to be lots of questions about the conference’s many seminars, committee meetings, educational programs, exhibitor locations, registration process—yes, and even fun things to do in the windy city.

Attendees to the July 9-15 conference at the McCormick Place Convention can text questions from their mobile phones and receive an answer from one of 250 volunteer ALA Ambassadors who will utilize Mosio’s Text a Librarian technology to quickly respond.

Source: School Library Journal

May/June 2009 Issue of EDUCAUSE Review Now Available Online

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Direct to Issue

Articles Include:

+ Apprehending the Future: Emerging Technologies, from Science Fiction to Campus Reality

+ A Web Game for Predicting Some Futures: Exploring the Wisdom of Crowds

+ Cyberscholarship; or, “A Rose Is a Rose Is a . . .”

+ Information Literacy and IT Fluency

Source: EDUCAUSE

Note: EDUCAUSE Review Now Has a Twitter Feed Located Here.

New: Resources By & About Supreme Court Nominee, Sonia Sotomayor

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From an E-Mail:

The Law Library of Congress launched a new website on Supreme Court Nominee Sonia Sotomayor. The site contains information on articles and books by Sotomayor, Congressional documents, cases, and web resources.

Direct to Web Page

Source: Law Library of Congress

POTUS — Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies: Classified Information and Controlled Unclassified Information

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies: Classified Information and Controlled Unclassified Information

As outlined in my January 21, 2009, memoranda to the heads of executive departments and agencies on Transparency and Open Government and on the Freedom of Information Act, my Administration is committed to operating with an unprecedented level of openness. While the Government must be able to prevent the public disclosure of information where such disclosure would compromise the privacy of American citizens, national security, or other legitimate interests, a democratic government accountable to the people must be as transparent as possible and must not withhold information for self-serving reasons or simply to avoid embarrassment.

To these ends, I hereby direct the following:

Section 1. Review of Executive Order 12958. (a) Within 90 days of the date of this memorandum, and after consulting with the relevant executive departments and agencies (agencies), the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs shall review Executive Order 12958, as amended (Classified National Security Information), and submit to me recommendations and proposed revisions to the order.
(b) The recommendations and proposed revisions shall address:

(i) Establishment of a National Declassification Center to bring appropriate agency officials together to perform collaborative declassification review under the administration of the Archivist of the United States;

(ii) Effective measures to address the problem of over classification, including the possible restoration of the presumption against classification, which would preclude classification of information where there is significant doubt about the need for such classification, and the implementation of increased accountability for classification decisions;

(iii) Changes needed to facilitate greater sharing of classified information among appropriate parties;

(iv) Appropriate prohibition of reclassification of material that has been declassified and released to the public under proper authority;

(v) Appropriate classification, safeguarding, accessibility, and declassification of information in the electronic environment, as recommended by the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction and others; and

(vi) Any other measures appropriate to provide for greater openness and transparency in the Government’s security classification and declassification program while also affording necessary protection to the Government’s legitimate interests.

Source: White House Press Office

New Report: Toward A 21st Century Framework for Federal Government Privacy Policy

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Direct to Full Text Report (41 pages; PDF)

This report includes discussions of:

+ Cookies
+ Social Networking
+ Search Logs
+ Location data and Geocoding
+ Government Use of Commercial Databases
+ Data Mining

From the Summary:

Soon after passage of the Privacy Act of 1974, experts noted loopholes in the law. The Act’s limitations have become more significant with the passage of time, as information technology has become more prevalent in the operation of government programs. And while the fundamentals of the Act—the principles of fair information practices—remain relevant and current, the letter of the Act and related law and policy do not reflect the realities of current technologies and do not protect against many important threats to privacy.

Inattention by policymakers to the underlying problems, and relatively little White House guidance, has meant that privacy policy is left to the individual agencies. There has been a lack of government?wide direction, and only a few privacy leaders in key agencies have been empowered by their internal leadership to fill the policy vacuum.

Moreover, new technologies not covered by the Act are generating new questions and concerns. For example, the Federal government has provided no guidance on technologies that allow civilian government agencies to track individuals and retain data about individuals by default. And government use of private?sector databases now allows the collection and use of detailed personal information with few privacy protections. Because little guidance has been provided to the agencies since the Privacy Act was enacted, agency policy and procedure have not adapted to technological change.

Source: Information Security and Privacy Board (U.S.)

Google Showcases New Communication and Collaboration Tool

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From the Blog Post:

Jens and Lars Rasmussen, the two brothers who created what would become Google Maps, have spent the last couple of years holed up in Google’s offices in Sydney, Australia, dreaming up a new tool for communicating over the Web. On Thursday, at a Google conference for developers in San Francisco, they showcased the fruits of their work: Google Wave.

Google Wave is an application running in a Web browser that creates a shared online desktop where two or more users can interact easily. They can exchange messages like they would do in e-mail or instant messaging conversation. They can share and edit rich documents that include formatted text, images and graphics. They can also drag-and-drop simple applications called widgets into a Wave to, for example, play a game together. And they can save and publish any Wave resulting from their collaboration to the Web.

Google Wave will not be available to the public until late in 2009.

Source: NY Times

Conference Report: Big Issues, Practical Tools Discussed at Archiving 2009 Conference

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From the Report:

The Archiving 2009 Conference, held in Arlington, VA, from May 4-7, 2009, had something for everyone with an interest in digital preservation.

The conference program was evenly balanced between digital collection stewardship on the one hand and imaging and preservation on the other. This permitted a unique opportunity for cross-domain interaction and sharing.

See Also: State Legislators Hear About Digital Preservation

Source: National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program / LC

Report: Public Libraries, Archives and Museums: Trends in Collaboration and Cooperation

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Direct to Complete Document (51 pages; PDF)

From the Executive Summary:

This report examines the recent trends in collaboration and cooperation between public libraries, archives and museums. In many cases, the shared or similar missions of the institutions reviewed make them ideal partners in collaborative ventures. Different types of collaborative projects are examined, including exhibits, community programs, digital resources and joint-use facilities. Examples come from Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom (UK), as well as from Russia, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Italy, Spain, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. The report concludes with a guide to collaborations, including examples of best practices in the field, a guide to a successful collaboration, a discussion of the benefit and risks of collaboration, and a list of resources consulted.

Source: IFLA Professional Report (108)

Free Company Tracking with BizJournals.com

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

This free service (registration required) allows you to track company news published in the many BizJournal.com newspapers/web sites.

Anytime you see the “w” symbol next to a company name in one of our articles, you can click it and choose to “watch” it.

From the Web Site:

The CompanyWatch email allows you to choose up to 10 companies to “watch.” We send you one email a week with all articles that have to do with your companies of interest, so you won’t miss any of them. You are also free to add or drop companies as you see fit.

Source: BizJournals.com

More Households Cut the Cord on Cable

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

More Households Cut the Cord on Cable

Amid tighter budgets, more people are trying to save money by cutting their cable cords. In response, cable companies are beginning to experiment with new Internet services.

In what’s shaping up as the home-entertainment equivalent of severing a landline phone service, more people are joining the ranks of “cord cutters” by forgoing cable subscriptions that can run $60 or more a month.

Instead, they’re turning to free over-the-air high-definition television channels and video-game consoles, such as Playstation 3 and XBox 360. They’re also watching Internet-connected TV sets, paying a basic high-speed Internet fee of about $45, as well as set-top boxes from companies like Netflix Inc. Some are also using media browsers that they can download free and run on PCs, providing access to TV shows, movies and other content directly from the Web.

The number of cable cutters remains too small to threaten the pay-television industry. Still, large cable companies such as Comcast Corp. and Time Warner Cable Inc. are noticing that people are spending more time online.

Source: Wall Street Journal

Coming Soon from Microsoft: A Rebranded and Enhanced Search Service Named Bing

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Very soon (in the next week or so) Microsoft will rebrand and enhance their general purpose web search service. It will be named Bing. This article takes a look at one of the designers of Bing, Brian MacDonald.

From the Article:

The update consists of a new look, a new name, and new capabilities for the product. And in the process, Microsoft hopes it will also get a fresh start in what has thus far been a painful journey.

Several of the features are things championed by MacDonald. In particular, the new engine has a left-hand navigation pane for moving among different types of searches. Kumo also breaks a search query down into a number of possible categories.

When one hovers over a particular result, they get a pop-up window with more information, such as the query terms in context on the page.

In other cases, Microsoft is bringing more information into the results themselves. Type in “Amazon” and one will get not only links to that Web site, but also the company’s hard-to-find customer service phone number. A search for UPS will let one track a package directly from Bing.

Source: News.com

See Also: A Complete Review of th Bing Search Engine by Danny Sullivan (via Search Engine Land)

Semantic Web: CBS/CNET Announce Adoption of OpenCalais

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

From the Report:

Today ThomsonReuters and CNET announced that they have formed an alliance to join the power of semantic analysis with digital media and publishing. According to the release, “Under the agreement, CNET will use the Thomson Reuters OpenCalais service for semantic analysis of its tech product reviews, award-winning news, and blog postings on consumer electronics and technology. This service will help streamline CNET’s content operations, drive audience engagement, and further extend CNET’s reach across the Web.”

OpenCalais is a free service from Thomson designed to simplify automated content operations, improve the reader experience and extend distribution to new search engines, news aggregators and social media applications. Using natural language processing, machine learning and other methods, Calais analyzes documents and finds the entities within it. OpenCalais then leverages its connection to the ‘Linked Data Cloud’ to link those entities to related people, products, maps, companies and more, helping return the facts and events hidden within the text.

Source: VIP LiveWire

Access: Obama Orders Review of Classified Information

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

From the Article:

President Barack Obama wants to hear from his top administration officials about a single-stop process to declassify some of the nation’s secrets.

Obama ordered his national security adviser to recommend how best to open government documents among agencies and to the public. Obama says the review should favor disclosure if it won’t threaten national security.

Source: AP (via Next Gov)

Canada: Launch of Book History Databases

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Library and Archives Canada (LAC) is pleased to announce the launch of five major databases which catalogue thousands of publications on the history of print culture in Canada from its beginnings in the sixteenth century to the twenty-first century.

These scholarly electronic resources, which have been available through the Internet via Dalhousie University’s website since 2003, were originally funded in 2000 by a Major Collaborative Research Initiative Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Not only were they developed to support the preparation of publishing six volumes (three in English, three in French) chronicling the history of print culture in Canada, but also to establish important resources for advancing the field when the project concluded.

Direct to Database

Source: Library and Archives Canada

Report: Contemporary Preservation Activities in ARL Libraries

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

From the Announcement:

The report by ARL Visiting Program Officer Lars Meyer, “Safeguarding Collections at the Dawn of the 21st Century: Describing Roles & Measuring Contemporary Preservation Activities in ARL Libraries,” responds to a recommendation of the 2006 ARL Task Force on the Future of Preservation in ARL Libraries. The task force encouraged ARL to conduct a high-level investigation of the range and balance of preservation activities represented among the ARL membership. Meyer’s report is a thoughtful and thorough qualitative examination of how research libraries’ preservation activities are evolving and expanding in the 21st century. He not only considered activities traditionally captured by ARL’s Preservation Statistics, but also a host of emerging activities largely, but not exclusively, centered on developing digital collections and involving collaborative efforts.

Direct to Full Text Report (54 pages; PDF)

Source: Association of Research Libraries