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The ORCID US Consortium at Five: Whatโ€™s Worked, What Hasnโ€™t, and Why?

The ORCID US consortium, managed by Lyrasis, is five years old in 2023 - hear about their progress so far and plans for the future in Alice Meadows' interview with their PID Program Leader, Sheila Raybun

The post The ORCID US Consortium at Five: Whatโ€™s Worked, What Hasnโ€™t, and Why? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

Guest Post โ€” Towards Global Equity for Open Access Booksย 

By: Niels Stern ยทย Ronald Snijder

The Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB) is celebrating its 10-year anniversary, a great opportunity to reflect on how far we have come with open infrastructures for the distribution and discoverability of open access books (monographs, edited collections, and other long-form publications).

The post Guest Post โ€” Towards Global Equity for Open Access Booksย  appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

The Bible and Book of Mormon Challenged Under Utah Book Ban Law

In one school district, the Bible and the Book of Mormon were flagged for โ€œsensitive materials review.โ€

Last month, a school district committee in Utah decided that the Bible should be removed from elementary and middle school libraries.

Amanda Gormanโ€™s Inaugural Poem, โ€œThe Hill We Climb,โ€ Restricted by Florida School

A grade school in Miami-Dade County said โ€œThe Hill We Climb,โ€ which Ms. Gorman read at President Bidenโ€™s inauguration in 2021, was โ€œbetter suitedโ€ for older students after a parent complained about it.

Amanda Gorman reciting a poem during the inauguration.

Greater Expectations โ€“ The academic library should be a benefactor for community-owned publishing

By: Taster
Across countries in the global north the transition to open access to research has in recent years been driven largely through library consortia and national institutions striking transformative agreements with commercial publishers. Drawing on recent work on The University of Sheffieldโ€™s content strategy, Peter Barr argues that academic libraries can play a larger role in โ€ฆ Continued

Controlled Digital Lending Takes a Blow in Court

A Federal judge's ruling offered a stern rebuke of the Internet Archive's National Emergency Library and its controlled digital lending service, providing a significant victory for the four publishers that had filed suit.

The post Controlled Digital Lending Takes a Blow in Court appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

The Internet Archive Loses on Controlled Digital Lending

By: Roger C. Schonfeld ยทย Karin Wulf ยทย Rick Anderson ยทย Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe ยทย Joseph Esposito ยทย Roy Kaufman

On Friday, the Internet Archive lost its "controlled digital lending" case on summary judgment. Reactions today from our Chefs Rick Anderson, Joseph Esposito, Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe, Roy Kaufman, Roger C. Schonfeld, and Karin Wulf.

The post The Internet Archive Loses on Controlled Digital Lending appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

Rogetโ€™s Thesaurus: A library of words

In my latest newsletter, I wrote about becoming obsessed with Rogetโ€™s Thesaurus, after realizing that every thesaurus Iโ€™d ever picked up was alphabetical,ย and alphabetizing a thesaurus basically destroys the meaning behind what Roget was trying to do.

โ€œWe tend to think of a thesaurus as a collection of synonyms and antonyms,โ€ writes Rogetโ€™s biographer, Joshua Kendell. โ€œBut Rogetโ€™s is essentially a reverse dictionary. With a dictionary, the user looks up a word to find its meaning. With Rogetโ€™s, the user starts with an idea and then keeps flipping through the book until he finds the word that best expresses it.โ€

Read it here.

A Library of Air

A visit to another of the world's fascinating archives, this time to Australia's Library of Air.

The post A Library of Air appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

ChatGPT will not replace Google Search

By: Taster
As speculation mounts that ChatGPT might replace Google Search,ย Tristan Greeneย cuts through the hype, arguing ChatGPT at present cannot replicate Googleโ€™s search function โ€“ โ€œSaying ChatGPT will replace search is like saying podcasts will replace universities. They do two different things.โ€ย This article was originally published on Undark, you can read the original articleย here. Since OpenAI unveiled โ€ฆ Continued

Guest Post โ€” The Efficacy of ChatGPT: Is it Time for the Librarians to Go Home?

In preparation for a presentation, Curtis Kendrick tried ChatGPT to see what it (they?) had to say. The results at first seemed credible, but where ChatGPT failed miserably was in the non-existent citations it provided.

The post Guest Post โ€” The Efficacy of ChatGPT: Is it Time for the Librarians to Go Home? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

Two Colorado libraries close for cleanup after meth residue found on surfaces

Two Colorado libraries โ€“ one in Boulder and one in the Denver suburb of Englewood โ€” have had to temporarily close down within the last month to scrub away methamphetamine contamination. Meth residue "exceeded state thresholds," said a city spokesperson, and was found on surfaces in the libraries' restrooms and elsewhere, including in the ducts, on walls, and on countertops. โ€” Read the rest

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