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D-Lib February 2002 John S. Erickson |
Digital Rights Management: Business and Technology A review of the book by Rosenblatt, Trippe and Mooney on technological and business aspects of protecting digital content.  |
D-Lib February 2002 Goodvin & Lippy |
eML: Taking Mississippi Libraries into the 21st Century A look at the thinking behind the Mississippi Library Association's approach to putting their magazine online.  |
New Architect March 2002 Neil McAllister |
Freedom of Expression For digital distribution to succeed, there must be broad interoperability between the different protection, commerce, and media management systems...  |
New Architect March 2002 Margaret Berry |
What I Want Developing user-friendly DRM...  |
New Architect March 2002 Steve Franklin |
Integrating DRM Weighing the benefits of digital rights management ultimately means finding a balance between cost trade-offs. Even though the costs of a DRM solution can be expensive, you must weigh these costs in turn against the potential cost of not protecting and not managing access to your media...  |
New Architect March 2002 Bret A. Fausett |
Data Control Or Quality of Service? It's difficult to deliver QOS in digital entertainment without having the kind of control that contracts and copyright protection schemes afford. Unfortunately, these are precisely the controls that have bedeviled the free sharing and use of information...  |
New Architect March 2002 |
Rights Management Under Fire A conversation with Adobe's James Alexander on e-books and digital rights management...  |
Wired February 2002 Jonathan Weber |
The Ever-Expanding, Profit-Maximizing, Cultural-Imperialist, Wonderful World of Disney The serious business of selling all-American fun...  |
Information Today February 2002 Dick Kaser |
Ghost in a Bottle The ghost is out of the bottle. That's how Derk Haank describes the current situation in which the authors of scientific papers are taking an increasing interest in who publishes them....  |
Information Today January 7, 2002 Barbara Quint |
BioMed Central Begins Charging Authors and Their Institutions for Article Publishing Starting this month, BioMed Central, the "publishing company committed to a policy of free access to scientific research" (as it describes itself), will introduce a processing charge for articles published in its nearly 60 online journals...  |
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