Access in a Digital Age
For the library and information professions no value is more fundamental than a commitment to providing the people with access to information. The support of society for this goal emerges from experiences with the development of four historic systems—the postal and telephone services, education, and broadcasting—which led to the advancement of the principle of universal service. The belief became firmly embedded in our nation that some services, essential to the progress of democratic government, must be made available to all. Access to information is one of them. After defining the importance of access to information, its history and dimensions, and the role of the library and information science professions in providing it, this entry describes the current impact of the digital age on equity of access. The key resources and challenges provided by digitization are explored in light of the five fundamental principles that underpin the professions’ commitment to providing information access: equity, intellectual freedom, intellectual property rights, privacy and, in more recent years, awareness, and advocacy. The challenges surrounding equity of access to education are explored along with the crucial necessity for the profession to recruit and retain a workforce with the skill to understand the experiences, the languages, and the perspectives of diverse populations. If library and information agencies are not able to support the programs and services Emerging Majorities want and need, will Emerging Majorities support libraries? Finally, the need for diversity is extended to the role of librarians as global citizens prepared and dedicated to minimizing global disparity in access.
- Research Article
- 10.52468/2542-1514.2024.8(1).140-147
- Mar 22, 2024
- Law Enforcement Review
The investment activity is diverse and can be carried out with the use of intellectual property rights in accordance with the current international and Russian investment law. The article aims to identify the specifics of the application of intellectual property rights as investments and the implementation of intellectual investments, i.e. investments endowed into intellectual property rights. The objectives of the study are to consider the categories of an investment and object of investment activity, intellectual property, exclusive and other intellectual rights, as well as to analyze and determine the features of legal regulation of the activity in question at the international and national levels in the Russian Federation. Based on the results of the systematic analysis with the use of formal legal, comparative and other research methods, it is concluded that investments as a property in a broad sense may include both exclusive and other non-personal intellectual property rights to the results of intellectual activity and equated means of individualization of goods, works, services and enterprises. At the same time, they exclude intellectual property itself as a set of various types of intangible products, moral and other personal non-proprietary intellectual rights by virtue of their inalienable and non-transferable character. It is argued to be the same with respect to the object of investment activity, i.e. the property which the investment is endowed in and is capable to bring income to the investor in the future. Investments into such intellectual property rights can be called as intellectual investments.The legal regulation of investment activity with the use of intellectual property rights has a dual character (in the sense that it is carried out by different investment legislative acts with the similar subject of their regulation) and depends on the type of a particular object used. If intellectual property rights are invested in fixed capital, then they are to be recognized as capital investments and are governed by the Federal Law of February 25,1999 No. 39-FZ “On Investment Activity in the Russian Federation Carried out in the Form of Capital Investments”. If intellectual property rights are used as the object of investment activity, i.e. where investments are endowed in, such intellectual investments are subject to the regulation by the Law of the RSFSR of June 26, 1991 No. 1488-1 “On Investment Activity in the RSFSR”.
- Research Article
- 10.4018/ijlis.2017070102
- Jul 1, 2017
- International Journal of Library and Information Services
Library and information science professional play an extremely important role in the society. However, in discharging their responsibilities and duties, core ethical principles are expected to be upheld by librarians and information workers as outlined in the professional codes of ethics. The aim of this paper is to appraise core ethical issues in library and information science profession in Nigeria. This paper discusses core ethical principle in library and information science profession such as universal access to information, intellectual property rights, intellectual freedom, copyright/fair use and privacy/confidentiality among others. This paper further identified ethical challenges confronting library and information science professionals in Nigeria. This paper concludes that regardless of the ethical challenges confronting library and information science professionals in Nigeria, the professional codes of ethics should be upheld.
- Research Article
2
- 10.1111/jwip.12229
- Jun 7, 2022
- The Journal of World Intellectual Property
The rendezvous between intellectual property rights and human rights has awakened slumbering legal spirits. Miscellaneous legal phenomena are now nestled in the intersection between intellectual property rights and human rights. However, the interplay between human rights and intellectual property rights is bizarrely characterized by amity and hostility. Naturally, therefore, situating indigenous intellectual property at the intersection of intellectual property and human rights becomes a daunting task. However, the dilemma is often overstated especially from the point of view of conventional intellectual property rights. At the outset of this Article, I shall be exploring the history and the development of the relationship between human rights and intellectual property rights. In the followng section, I shall be examining the extent to which intellectual property rights are entrenched in the international human rights instruments. The last section shall be devoted to exploring the phenomenon of locating indigenous peoples' rights at the interface between intellectual property rights and human rights and reflecting on the ensuing issues—an aspect which has seldom been considered in the existing literature.
- Research Article
- 10.33731/62019.188354
- Dec 13, 2019
- Theory and Practice of Intellectual Property
The article is devoted to the content of the concepts «intellectual property» and «right of intellectual property» and to the issue of the possibility of using them as equivalent concepts. The author considersthe features of a broad understanding of the concept of intellectual property, in which it is revealed as a complex set of social relations arising at all levels of public life. With this approach intellectual relations are only one of the varieties of intellectual property relations, the totality of which is subject to legal regulation only in part.Taking into account the above, the difference between the meanings of the concepts «intellectual property» (in the sense of this concept as a social relation) and «intellectual property right» is reflected in the content of the structural elements of the relations that denote these concepts: 1) Subjects of intellectual property rights are determinedon the basis of compliance with certain legal requirements regarding legal personality, as well as the acquisition of subjective legal rights and obligations, which are provided to them by legal norms (by using their legal personality); the subjects of intellectual property become participants of social relations of different levels, including those, which are outside of the legal regulation. Such interactions may be related to realization of creative abilities of a person, mental activity, etc; 2) In the centre of understanding of the concept «object of intellectual property rights» is the content of intellectual property rights as a totality of personal non-property and property rights.The defining aspect of legal protection is the right to the created object of intellectual property rights. At the same time the object of intellectual property is a value in sociophilosophical sense that satisfies the social, cultural, mental and other needs and interests of people. In this sense the object by its nature is a good for man; 3) Social connections between the subjects of intellectual relations are revealed through corresponding rights and obligations of the participants of these relations; in the relations of intellectual property social relations manifest themselves as interaction between people in different spheres of social life, based on the corresponding social statusesand roles, in which individuals carry out creative activity, realize their mental and cultural needs, etc. Understanding the concept «intellectual property» as identical with the concept «intellectual property right» is based on a normative approach. This approach shows that the concept of «intellectual property» and «intellectual property right» are used in the legislation in the same sense and can denote both objects of intellectual property right and rights about such objects.
- Research Article
- 10.1002/bult.305
- Dec 1, 2004
- Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Intellectual Property and Biological Knowledge
- Research Article
2
- 10.2139/ssrn.2822536
- Aug 18, 2016
- SSRN Electronic Journal
The intersection of intellectual property and human rights is a relatively new site in the search for balance in intellectual property law and policy. Although this intersection opens up intellectual property to a unique kind of interdisciplinary analysis, only the human rights system appears to have seized the opportunity, while its intellectual property rights counterpart remains reluctant to engage. There are, so far, different competing first impressions over the nature of the intersection between intellectual property and human rights. Despite empirical credence of the conflict narrative, the co-existence of complementary thesis of the intellectual property and human rights interface has greater prospects for a meaningful and balanced rapprochement between the two. This chapter argues for critical scrutiny of the human rights appeal of intellectual property rights in order to avoid its potential for being hijacked by stronger stakeholders at the expense of their weaker opponents for whom intellectual property rights have strong paradoxical ramifications.
- Research Article
- 10.5204/mcj.1965
- Jul 1, 2002
- M/C Journal
The Colour of Copyright
- Research Article
- 10.35750/2071-8284-2022-4-60-66
- Dec 16, 2022
- Vestnik of the St. Petersburg University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
The world community recognizes that intellectual property and intellectual rights are one of the foundations of the modern business world. The issues of choosing ways to protect intellectual property rights are the subject of constant discussions. The authors analyze the problem in two aspects: from the point of view of state and international policy and from the point of view of the possibility of protecting their intellectual rights by participants in civil turnover. The purpose of the study is to study the mechanism of intellectual property rights protection, as well as to study the problems of compensation for moral damage and self-defense in the field of intellectual property. When preparing the article, general scientific logical methods were used, as well as a private formal legal method. The authors note that the conflict between the interests of the copyright holder of exclusive rights, on the one hand, and the general rights of participation and access, on the other, is a characteristic feature of modern society and culture, therefore intellectual property and intellectual rights are of interest not only as a legal institution, but also as a cultural model and socio-economic mechanism. With the development of digital technologies, the very principle of exclusivity of intellectual rights is increasingly being questioned both in theory and in practice, which naturally leads to a revision of existing ideas about the protection of these rights.
- Single Report
1
- 10.35188/unu-wider/wbn/2020-6
- Jan 1, 2020
Making a COVID-19 vaccine globally available once developed: Decoupling production of the vaccine from its development
- Book Chapter
- 10.1007/978-3-030-44191-3_12
- Jan 1, 2020
This paper provides a theoretical overview of and practical guidance on the use of intellectual property (IP) rights as security in Estonia. It begins with an overview of the different IP rights in Estonia and the categories of security rights that can be granted over them. Like in other European countries, there are both non-registered and registered IP rights in Estonia. The different types of IP rights can be categorized as either copyright and related rights or as industrial property rights. In addition to national IP rights, EU-wide IP rights such as EU trademarks and Community also have effect in Estonia. The main ways to create a security right over an IP right are by establishing a pledge over IP rights or by transferring the IP rights as security. An IP right may be encumbered with a pledge through the establishment of a registered security over movables (for registered IP rights) or a pledge of rights (for non-registered IP rights). In addition, non-registered IP rights can also form part of a general commercial pledge, which is established over the entire movable property of an enterprise.
- Research Article
2
- 10.1016/j.irle.2013.07.003
- Jul 16, 2013
- International Review of Law and Economics
Decentralizing the lawmaking function: Private lawmaking markets and intellectual property rights in law
- Research Article
- 10.2139/ssrn.2277748
- Jun 11, 2013
- SSRN Electronic Journal
In a series of articles and a book published shortly before his untimely death, Professor Larry Ribstein argued for decentralizing the lawmaking function, enabling private parties to make law, and harnessing the market as a force for legal innovation. As part of this project, Professor Ribstein, along with Professor Bruce Kobayashi, called for broader intellectual property (IP) rights in legal creations. Their argument relies on the conventional quasi-public goods rationale for IP rights. Innovators have suboptimal incentives to create new law in the absence of property rights because competitors can free ride on their creations. As a result, without IP rights, privately-made law would be created, as it is today, mostly as a byproduct of other activities such as litigation or political rent-seeking. And byproduct lawmaking is likely to produce suboptimal law. Broader IP rights solve the free rider problem and thus make possible a vigorous private lawmaking market. This Article, which was written for a conference celebrating Professor Ribstein’s scholarship, examines the case for granting broader IP rights in law as a way to incentivize legal innovation in a private lawmaking market. The discussion begins by briefly examining some of the benefits and costs of harnessing the private market to produce better law. With this background in place, it then turns to the case for IP rights in law. The Article first surveys the limited scope of protection under current IP law and then discusses the benefits and costs of expanding IP rights. It closes by focusing on some special problems with granting property rights in aspects of common law adjudication, such as litigation documents and judicial decisions. In the end, the goal is to inject a note of caution. Private lawmaking is more attractive for some types of legal innovation and less attractive for others, and it is not clear that broader IP rights are necessary or desirable to spur legal innovation in a private market. It might be best to proceed incrementally, by first removing the professional barriers to competition and then expanding IP rights only if experience with the new market supports the need for additional protection.
- Research Article
109
- 10.1007/s10551-004-1772-6
- Oct 1, 2004
- Journal of Business Ethics
While information technologies present organizations with opportunities to become more competitive, unsettled social norms and lagging legislation guiding the use of these technologies present organizations and individuals with ethical dilemmas. This paper presents two studies investigating the relationship between intellectual property and privacy attitudes, Machiavellianism and Ethical Ideology, and working in R&D and computer literacy in the form of programming experience. In Study 1, Machiavellians believed it was more acceptable to ignore the intellectual property and privacy rights of others. Programmers and R&D workers considered violating intellectual property rights more acceptable. Programmers did not consider violating privacy rights more acceptable, but R&D workers did. Finally, there was an interaction between Machiavellianism, programming and R&D. Machiavellians who also had programming experience or worked in R&D found violations of intellectual property much more acceptable. The effect of Machiavellianism on attitudes toward violations of privacy was enhanced by working in R&D, but not by programming experience. In Study 2, idealists believed it was less acceptable to ignore the intellectual property and privacy rights of others. Relativists found it more acceptable to violate intellectual property rights, though they did not consider it more acceptable to violate privacy rights. Those with programming experience were more accepting of intellectual property rights violations, but not of privacy violations. Finally, programming experience moderated the relationship between idealism, relativism and attitudes toward these unethical information practices. Implications for diminishing unethical behavior among Machiavellians, Relativists, programmers and those in R&D are discussed.
- Research Article
- 10.24260/al-usroh.v4i1.961
- Jul 17, 2024
- Al-Usroh
This research explains waqf for intellectual property and reviews of Islamic law. As well as answering and knowing: 1) the position of intellectual property rights as an object of waqf in the concept of Islamic law. 2) implementation of the endowment of intellectual property rights if the wakif dies. The position of intellectual property rights as an object of waqf is explained in the Case Study of Article 16 paragraph 3 Letter E of Law Number 41 of 2004 concerning Waqf, as well as the Islamic religious perspective. This research is included in the descriptive qualitative research cluster using a library research approach (literature study), a way of collecting data in research by collecting literary sources such as books that explain waqf, journals related to research, and books that discuss waqf. intellectual property rights, the method of validating data from this research uses four criteria, namely reliability, transferability, reliability and verifiability, and data analysis techniques with data reduction, data display, and data withdrawal. This research shows that: 1) the position of Intellectual Property Rights in Islamic law. The position of intellectual waqf property rights when they become the object of waqf. There are many opinions about this, but in essence, all of them allow or are legal in waqf rights. Even though IPR waqf is basically rarely done, it is permitted by all Islamic schools of thought. Waqf that does not materialize, such as art or the identity of an item, is legally waqf, and the terms return to the basic law of waqf. 2) Implementation of the endowment of Intellectual Property Rights when the person providing the endowment dies. The position of giving IPR is if the waqf is issued before death, then the gift is continued based on the deed, because the gift is a legal act of waqf to separate/transfer part of one's property rights to be used according to the rights and values ??of worship of both the living and the dead. The reward is then received by the reward waqif, so that the reward continues and the waqf remains valid in religious law and in the context of the state.
- Research Article
1
- 10.1111/jwip.12199
- Sep 21, 2021
- The Journal of World Intellectual Property
Evolution of internet and technology has led to an increase in electronic commerce (e‐commerce). Consequently, disputes regarding commercial use of the internet are emerging in many developed and developing countries. Many of these disputes concern the infringement of intellectual property (IP) rights. However, IP rights are, perhaps, spurned by many developing countries when it comes to e‐commerce—making it a timely study for many developing countries such as Bangladesh; whose e‐commerce industry is experiencing extraordinary growth in the past few years. Although Bangladesh embarked into e‐commerce years ago, however, judiciary of the country has not yet experienced disputes addressing IP rights in the e‐commerce industry. Mostly, because the significant connection of IP rights with e‐commerce are yet to comprehend. Against this backdrop, focusing on the propinquity between e‐commerce and IP rights, this paper examines the adeptness of the contemporary IP rights enactments of Bangladesh in protecting IP rights in e‐commerce industry of Bangladesh. Arguing that IP rights are the most essential and value‐bearing component of e‐commerce industry, the paper presents how IP rights are violated by various entities of the industry every now and then. The paper delineates the disputes of such nature which already exist but remained unaddressed because of the inadequate understanding of IP rights and loopholes in the Bangladesh IP enactments. The paper concludes by giving a persuasive guideline to protect the legitimate rights and interests of various entities of the e‐commerce industry in Bangladesh.
- Ask R Discovery
- Chat PDF
AI summaries and top papers from 250M+ research sources.