November 18, 2003
Tomorrow Morning: Karen Coyle on DRM; Webcast 10am EST

The Library of Congress Luminary Lectures

    Karen Coyle: The Technology of Copyright: Digital Rights Management

Wednesday, November 19th, 10:30-12:00 noon @ the Pickford Theater (James Madison Building, Third Floor) OR watch the webcast:

The video of the live lecture will available from this page on Wednesday, November 19th from 10:00am -12:00 noon EST (in RealPlayer format).

(Is it just me, or there irony in a lecture about DRM, digital media and technological controls webcast on a proprietary format?)

To view it, you must have the Real Player installed and at least a 28 K-bps (kilobits per second) Internet connection for your computer. The RealPlayer software may be downloaded, free of charge, from the RealNetwork Web site.

ABOUT THE LECTURE:

Without technological controls, digital documents are easily copied. Publishers of texts, music and video are looking to digital rights management (DRM) technology to allow them to distribute and sell their goods in digital format with a limited risk of piracy. DRM technologies in development today range from simple password control to elaborate models of trusted systems. They all exercise some control over the use of materials they protect. What will it mean to writers, publishers, readers and libraries to work with documents that are protected by technology? How does DRM interact with copyright law? Can we live with it? Can we survive without it?

ABOUT THE SPEAKER:

Karen Coyle has over two decades of experience in digital libraries. She has recently worked for the Division of Library Automation at the University of California and the California Digital Library. She is a well-known metadata expert and has served on the MARC standards committee, the NISO OpenURL committee, and has advised in the development of MODS and other metadata efforts.

While active in developing computer systems for libraries, she is outspoken
about the effects, both negative and positive, electronic information is having
on the social role of libraries. She has published numerous articles on practical and policy questions relating to the "new information order." She has been instrumental in developing an awareness of the relationship between technology and privacy, both in libraries and in the general public. She is leading the Office for Information Technology Policy's task force on ebooks, which fosters library participation in arenas where both policy and technology are being developed that may determine the future of reading. Karen testified before the Copyright Office hearings on the role of technological controls and the doctrine of First Sale.

Karen is a long-time activist with Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, for whom she designed their best-seller t-shirt that reads: Question Technology.

The Library of Congress' Luminary Lectures program supports the ALA's @ your library™ Program.

Posted by Mary Hodder at November 18, 2003 04:31 PM
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