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Victoria Spagolo
July 21, 2011
847.
wang snow
March 18, 2011
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846.
Johnny Mims
March 8, 2011
845.
Leszek Chudzinski
March 6, 2011
The raison d'etre of OCLC is to serve the US public through its member libraries. The recent OCLC policy changes directly affect this premise and de facto turns this organization into a dictatorial and adversarial monopoly. This must be stopped. We don't need another Google.
844.
Bozena Chudzinski
March 4, 2011
843.
jonn3 jonn3
January 3, 2011
comment1,
842.
seubnubed seubnubed
December 27, 2010
base1.txt;42;42
841.
doxycycline side effects doxycycline side effects
December 12, 2010
comment6,
840.
Arsen Dalavaccio
August 14, 2010
There is no reason that libraries should have to depend on a system like this nowadays. OCLC was meant to help libraries, not control how they do things! Plus, having used it myself, it isn't all that effective either. Plenty of books have at least 6 different ways to enter in the info. If someone doesn't search correctly they might miss the book at their local library. OCLC needs to deliver or go away, and needs to stop having a monopoly!
839.
kaitlin smullen
July 31, 2010
838.
beausurni1993 beausurni1993
July 26, 2010
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837.
sussane sh
July 8, 2010
very good start...
836.
Sandra Smith
June 2, 2010
835.
Robert Wirgau
March 28, 2010
Our local libraries are having enough financial trouble with out this burden. OCLC claims non-profit status but is acting like a greed-head for-profit corporation!
834.
Tawn Sullivan
February 24, 2010
Cheaters will always endup loosing!!
833.
Barbara Black
February 23, 2010
832.
Sharlene LaForge
February 16, 2010
Sad that we paid for OCLC copy cataloging, now they get to keep those records. It's strange....
831.
Richard Gobeille
February 1, 2010
This affects ALL of us!
830.
John Adelman
December 28, 2009
829.
Paul Reimringer
December 7, 2009
very interesting.
828.
Matt Glinski
December 1, 2009
827.
patrick Studdert
November 27, 2009
826.
pam pedigo
November 5, 2009
you should be ashamed.
825.
Jaun Castillo
October 29, 2009
824.
Peter R. Munoz
October 24, 2009
823.
vipin goyal
October 24, 2009
I am too sensetive about right to information.
822.
hugh barnard
October 10, 2009
I live in Tower Hamlets which has an atrocious attitude to library science except, of course, for belief-based texts
821.
Janet Maloney
September 15, 2009
820.
Timothy Hughes
August 19, 2009
819.
Theo Clarke
August 18, 2009
818.
Mark Preston
August 16, 2009
I worked for the UCLA Retrospective Conversion project and we cataloged about 100,000 citations into OCLC. It would be a shame for me to have to pay for the work I created for them.
817.
MedNamlelomext MedNamlelomext
August 14, 2009
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815.
James Hardy
July 30, 2009
814.
LESLIE DAGGETT
July 8, 2009
Keep reading free, keep thought free. "Leslie L. Daggett" @ http://claimid.com/leslieldaggett
813.
Clair Segal
May 19, 2009
Freedom of information means freedom of information. Not "freedom of information that OCLC chooses to make available for the fee negotiated."
812.
Sean Barry
May 7, 2009
811.
David Thompson
April 24, 2009
810.
wang tao
April 22, 2009
oclc must change!
809.
samuel duke
April 21, 2009
books are meant to be read not used..
808.
Viviana Valencia
March 30, 2009
This is an outrage my library has limited funding as it is, price gauging is what this is.
807.
Leah LoSchiavo
March 29, 2009
806.
Stephen Ball
March 26, 2009
I'm a programmer for a university library. The OCLC policy change is completely antithetical to a healthy programming and research environment. This is public data that should be accessible by the public.
805.
Antonio Hicks
March 14, 2009
804.
test test
March 13, 2009
tetw
803.
William Watkins
March 4, 2009
802.
Gabriele Hayden
March 2, 2009
801.
joe godwin
February 23, 2009
800.
Jonathon Storer
February 18, 2009
In an Age where technology can make information and resources freely accessible, another company tries to take advantage of the people it serves. It's sad.
799.
Linda Wilhelm
February 17, 2009
798.
Kristi Thompson
February 12, 2009
797.
Daniel O'Connell
February 10, 2009
How greedy can you get?
796.
Johanne Toussaint
February 8, 2009
795.
susan bright
February 8, 2009
794.
Jeff Jacobs
February 8, 2009
793.
Susan Dillon
February 6, 2009
792.
Melanie Makin
February 2, 2009
You own the format; you do NOT own the information. That belongs to all of us.
791.
Karen Tercho
February 2, 2009
790.
Erik Robinson
February 2, 2009
789.
Peter Larsen
February 2, 2009
788.
A. Izenstark
February 2, 2009
Libraries around the world have uploaded their information to OCLC with the intention and understanding that this information would be shared. Make this information available for the researchers of today, but also those of tomorrow.
787.
Troy Martha
February 1, 2009
786.
Rebecca Blakeley
February 1, 2009
785.
burton haun
January 28, 2009
784.
William Foran
January 28, 2009
783.
Faye Robinson
January 28, 2009
782.
Ivan Frade
January 28, 2009
781.
Peter De Keyser
January 28, 2009
780.
Wilma van den Brink
January 27, 2009
779.
Ferry Jansen
January 27, 2009
778.
An Smets
January 27, 2009
777.
Manja Schledorn
January 27, 2009
"they're trying to steal our libraries" and they should be stopped.
776.
Daniel Cornwall
January 27, 2009
Our library contributes records to OCLC. What we do with them should be our business. Additionally, it's hard enough sharing book resources through the web despite the good job worldcat.org is doing. Keeping reuse of records free will maximize efforts of libraries everywhere.
775.
Gerard Bierens
January 26, 2009
We are the library, where information is supposed to be free. OCLC exists only because we -the libraries- grant them access to our collections. Libraries need to be free to do whatever they want with their own books and its metadata.
774.
Jacqueline Limpens
January 26, 2009
773.
Guus van den Brekel
January 26, 2009
Libraries unite! This is OUR content we created. And if they have it their way, we have to pay to re-use it??
772.
James Jacobs
January 26, 2009
Think collaboratively, act responsibly!
771.
Jerome Manning
January 25, 2009
I remember OCLC when it was friendly and helpful. How have they become so monopolistic and arrogant? Soon, their lawyers will find a way to copyright our hearts and minds.
770.
David Brady
January 24, 2009
I am a library user, concerned about rising costs
769.
Dan Diffendale
January 23, 2009
768.
Aaron Sherman
January 22, 2009
Library member
767.
Anne Grady O'Malley
January 22, 2009
766.
Miriam Medow
January 20, 2009
765.
Trevor Calvert
January 20, 2009
764.
Christian Hauschke
January 20, 2009
Library data has to be free to keep libraries and our culture alive.
763.
Bradley McCulley
January 20, 2009
As librarians we should be organizing data not controling it. Open-access is the future. There are always alternatives to these Stalinist tactics.
762.
Cristina Mitra
January 19, 2009
761.
Peter Reynolds
January 19, 2009
I sell second-hand books and am very much into books. I don't want information I might want to use for personal or business needs to be proprietary, especially if it is the people of cities and counties who pay for the information to be gathered.
760.
Holly Havens
January 19, 2009
Restricting OCLC records is a step backward into the last century. It is morally wrong and fundamentally flawed as a policy, and will discourage open records sharing. This is detrimental to everyone.
759.
Sharon Davenport
January 19, 2009
People befor profit !
758.
Monica Cromarty
January 19, 2009
757.
Daniel Hooker
January 18, 2009
As a new library school student, this move will profoundly affect my and my colleagues' futures in libraries across North America as we transition from learning academic definitions about the library's duty to protect intellectual freedom into the working world's application of those tenets. I hope that the difference between them will not be too great.
756.
Heather Johnson
January 18, 2009
The OCLC should not be allowed to assume control of everyone's contributed data, which is designed and shared to be of help to others, anywhere in the world. There are laws against monopolies, and these laws should be exerted.
755.
Rachel Shaw
January 18, 2009
I am a historian, writer, researcher and member of the general public. I am the child and godchild of librarians, and I have worked in libraries myself. Knowledge should not be restricted to one entity - if it's not free, neither are we.
754.
Alicia Lux
January 18, 2009
753.
Amy Sonnie
January 18, 2009
752.
Ellen Ronnlund
January 17, 2009
751.
Anna Barnard
January 16, 2009
Over the years I have contributed catalog records to World Cat for the good of all. I am not pleased with this restrictive attitude.
750.
Felicia Moldovan
January 16, 2009
I am content with the status quo. Moreover I do not want to be limited/bound by rules & regulations imposed on me without any input from my part.
749.
Eliza Mitchell
January 16, 2009
748.
Matthew Montgomery
January 16, 2009
747.
Judy Kennedy
January 16, 2009
In a tight economy, this is the worst thing that could happen.
746.
Ronald Schwartz
January 16, 2009
let's nationalize the OCLC, fire their executives, and appoint someone to run it as a public service.
745.
Cheli Derry
January 15, 2009
744.
David Kruidenier
January 14, 2009
743.
Jessica Efron
January 14, 2009
I am a cataloger and a librarian. They've got us over a barrel. And it's just greedy.
742.
Dave Hudson
January 14, 2009
741.
Stephen Hughes
January 14, 2009
To be frank, I haven't used WorldCat since I stopped working in a library (non-profit) but valued the efforts of those people around the world who originally created many of the catalogue records freely for distribution. For the same organisation to start selling access offends - I mean to retrospectively pay the people who have created their data, I think not.
740.
Peter Gunther
January 14, 2009
739.
James Braden
January 14, 2009
738.
Paula Perry
January 14, 2009
737.
Bess Reynolds
January 14, 2009
736.
Patricia Callahan
January 14, 2009
735.
April Perlowski
January 14, 2009
734.
Terence O'Connell
January 13, 2009
733.
John Houser
January 13, 2009
732.
Wendy Huot
January 13, 2009
731.
Jeff Archie
January 13, 2009
We will be seriously considering cancelling our OCLC membership in light of this policy change.
730.
Matt Price
January 13, 2009
Libraries are, for the most part, public institutions with commitments to their constituents. The OCLC has a responsibility to its member institutions not to betray the trust put in it by those institutions decades ago. Shame on OCLC for this transparent power grab!
729.
Kate Elgayeva
January 13, 2009
728.
Jenny Edwards
January 13, 2009
I manage a small private library and depend on shared catalogs.
727.
Cecilia Boyle
January 13, 2009
OCLC should come up with a better way to control revenue/profit ventures then to steal data meant to be shared freely with libraries and patrons around the world.
726.
Aaron Ucko
January 13, 2009
725.
Sylvia Wrigley
January 13, 2009
My son is a heavy user of library systems and I am forever in the debt of the libraries and librarians who have put in the time and effort to collect records allowing for the awesome cataloging we have today. I think your policy for use will put that into jeopardy.
724.
melissa riley
January 13, 2009
This will severely limit the availability of access to library books by limiting ready access to knowlege of their existence and whereabouts. What are you thinking?
723.
Lori Thornton
January 12, 2009
I am the cataloger at an institution for OCLC. We want more open access, not more restrictions.
722.
David Norgren
January 12, 2009
721.
Cecelia Petro
January 12, 2009
The new policy is such a broad power grab, please reconsider the methods and thousands of librarians who compiled these records and shared them with the world--how could you decide that they "belong" to OCLC? Your taking ownership of historical and future records is beyond anything intended by "cooperating" libraries.
720.
Kathi Mehan
January 12, 2009
719.
Mike Lynch
January 12, 2009
718.
Reuben Kaller
January 12, 2009
717.
James Highland
January 12, 2009
716.
Laura Condit
January 12, 2009
715.
Dawn Wilson
January 12, 2009
As a librarian I am appalled that an institution built on sharing commonly created records has created a policy to suppress information and gouge library budgets in this time of dwindling funding.
714.
Dominic McLaughlin
January 12, 2009
Being a future librarian and possibly future cataloger, this does concern me greatly.
713.
Miguel Galán
January 12, 2009
712.
Carol Crawford
January 12, 2009
711.
Sarah New
January 12, 2009
710.
Rita Ennen
January 12, 2009
I have personally contributed records to OCLC and I meant for them to be available for other libraries to use. I was not paid by OCLC for my work nor were any of the thousands of catalogers whose work has been contributed to this database. OCLC may properly be the host for Worldcat records, but they DO NOT really own them.
709.
Michael Foight
January 12, 2009
708.
Danielle Plumer
January 12, 2009
My opinions are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my employer.
707.
Helen Clarke
January 12, 2009
OCLC's position is unethical, a land grab for the intellectual work of its members, and foolish, failing to recognize the role open access could play in creating game changing innovations and improvements in the use of metadata.
706.
Jennifer Barth
January 12, 2009
705.
Brianna Frank
January 12, 2009
704.
Elizabeth Przywolnik
January 12, 2009
Restricted access to library records is pretty much the exact opposite of what makes libraries great.
703.
Lou McLean
January 12, 2009
702.
Rachel Bury
January 12, 2009
701.
Magnus Enger
January 12, 2009
Openness and sharing of resources should lie at the heart of libraries and their mission!
700.
Anneli Korhonen
January 12, 2009
699.
Vik-Thor Rose
January 12, 2009
You are WAY overreaching. You are claiming to own records that were created by others.
698.
April Mintschenko
January 12, 2009
The rules have gone to far, especially with OCLC as the only judge. There is no room for discussion or appeal. If any government agency tried to implement these rules people would be up in arms. The work of thousands should not be owned annd vetted by one group. It especially irritates me that work that was done years ago, under a very different auspices than the 'law' currently being laid down, should be included in this ruling.
697.
Jon Gillespie
January 12, 2009
696.
Morgan Kay
January 12, 2009
695.
Jessica Green
January 12, 2009
I am in library school and about to be out looking for a job. This sort of perpetual grab for rights over information gathered by thousands really offends me. Libraries are not in the business of greed, but this powershift is exactly that. The lack of consultation with the members of the OCLC is also a cause of concern. Please rethink this implementation as this has gone way beyond the original purview
694.
Jane Hyde
January 12, 2009
I am a librarian (who does everything in my library) and an educated citizen with a need for these resources, and I believe in cooperatively managed open access, with no profit gained by one entity.
693.
Sylvia Orner
January 11, 2009
692.
Debbie Freeman
January 11, 2009
691.
Donna Pare
January 11, 2009
690.
Joelle Godfrey
January 11, 2009
689.
Russ Mayes
January 11, 2009
This serves to limit the available knowledge, and as a result it affects me and anyone who conducts research or, indeed, uses libraries.
688.
Stephanie Iser
January 11, 2009
information should be free
687.
amanda etches-johnson
January 11, 2009
686.
Alison Steinberg
January 11, 2009
A sad day indeed. Shame on you OCLC. Remember our belief that information wants to be free.
685.
Robert Martin
January 11, 2009
No person or organization has the right to claim the work of thousands of libraries as their own.
684.
Mandy Phillips
January 11, 2009
This completely goes against the way in which the world is moving, towards a shared, open access model and almost seems to be moving towards a corporate model. As a librarian considering joining OCLC, I will wait until this discussion is over before making any decisions.
683.
Fern Rabinovitz
January 11, 2009
682.
Darlene Fichter
January 11, 2009
The work of many libraries should be freely shared for non-profit use.
681.
Timothy Wisniewski
January 11, 2009
680.
Angelo PUGLIESE
January 11, 2009
Should we pay OCLC each time we want to catalog a title? NO WAY ! This could be the loss of a very big chunk of everybody's freedom: Monopolizing the book data, in the age of free books on the web: w hat a shame!
679.
Frank Cervone
January 11, 2009
Where is the input from the OCLC membership in this decision? This has not been vetted or even announced in an open and transparent manner with the membership. Decisions made in this manner are antithetical to the whole concept of OCLC as a consortium of library partners. In the end, this will do far more damage to OCLC than any possible gain that might be accrued in the short term through licensing fees.
678.
Holly Terrell
January 11, 2009
677.
Robert Gaskins
January 11, 2009
676.
Marijane White
January 11, 2009
675.
Jolene Connelly
January 11, 2009
This doesn't just affect me, it affects everyone. OCLC is overstepping their bounds. Think of how many people use libraries. Children, school students, college students, adults. Those doing research, or reading just for fun or to pass the time. This could have major and negative affects on anyone using a library.
674.
Chris Vestal
January 11, 2009
673.
Benjamin Clark
January 11, 2009
This is a step backward for public service and accessibility. It is narrow and it is wrong.
672.
Thomas Brevik
January 11, 2009
671.
Joanna Curtis
January 11, 2009
I''m deeply concerned about the terms of OCLC's new contract. I hope that it is challenged in court before it has chilling effects on its member libraries.
670.
Jenny Levine
January 11, 2009
This move lacks transparency, discussion (before you announced it), and a vote by the membership. This is not how an organization for libraries should be acting. If you truly believe what is in this policy, stand up for it and put it to a vote of your membership.
669.
Jonathan Upton
January 11, 2009
668.
Erik Hatcher
January 11, 2009
Free the knowledge
667.
Eric Edwards
January 10, 2009
666.
char laughon
January 9, 2009
665.
Karen Rutherford
January 9, 2009
664.
Heather Acton
January 8, 2009
As a supporter of co-operatives in general, I feel that this new policy and the way in which it is being enacted is contrary to the co-operative mandate. I object.
663.
Ian Walls
January 7, 2009
Information is not a commodity; its a service. Instead of trying to control who can access these records, focus on developing the tools and community necessary to make them better.
662.
Sarah Houghton-Jan
January 7, 2009
661.
Kevin Webb
January 7, 2009
660.
Kevin O'Gorman
January 5, 2009
I'm a teacher-librarian working for the Department of Education in New South Wales, Australia. Our school library system already under financial strain may be adversely affected by any attempt to monopolise cataloguing processes worldwide.
659.
Siamak Taati
January 4, 2009
658.
Mike Liptack
January 4, 2009
Peronal librarian and LibraryThing user who wishes to spend less time typing in redundant info and can't believe what OCLC is doing!
657.
Jack Sewvello
January 3, 2009
656.
Noora Järvilä
January 1, 2009
655.
Suvi Hanhikoski
January 1, 2009
654.
Steve Clayton
January 1, 2009
Personally I find it disgusting that once again a US company is trying to take control of world information and Internet use.
653.
Nick Narcowich
January 1, 2009
652.
Molly Seely
December 31, 2008
Stop the fascists!!!
651.
Qwo-Li Driskill
December 31, 2008
650.
Pouya Tafti
December 30, 2008
649.
Glen Horton
December 30, 2008
648.
Kathleen DeLaurenti
December 29, 2008
647.
Peter Keane
December 28, 2008
this is (potentially) a worrisome move.
646.
Ben Skinner
December 26, 2008
I am a librarian in the UK and a great user and supporter of LibraryThing
645.
carol terry
December 24, 2008
I am a librarian. All data generated from LC and/or other libraries should be available to everyone.
644.
Kathleen Stocker
December 24, 2008
How is it that OCLC is being allowed to get away with commandeering public information for its personal gain? This must not be allowed to happen.
643.
Karen Lee
December 23, 2008
642.
MF Kane
December 23, 2008
added cost to my library mean decreased services and decreased access. Not good for any of us.
641.
Ricardo Reis
December 22, 2008
640.
Gail Lewis
December 20, 2008
639.
Peter Capek
December 19, 2008
I'm President of the Board of Trustees of the Ossining Public Library, and can't see any justification for this change. I'm opposed to it.
638.
Caleb Bohon
December 19, 2008
I do not think it is right for a company (OCLC) to be attempting to control how people use the data that it stores EVEN THOUGH they may not get that data from OCLC directly. This data should be free bcause it was created by a group and mostly by Federal or public libraries, and thus was paid for by taxes.
637.
Gary Harris
December 19, 2008
636.
Luis Interiano
December 19, 2008
As a former director of the St. James Parish Library (La.), a former staffer of the New Orleans Public Library, and a graduate student at the Louisiana State University School of Library & Information Science in Baton Rouge, I am highly concerned that the overall mission of OCLC, which was originally created by librarians for librarians to help us streamline our work through the compilation of commonly-held resources, has now shifted into a strictly capitalist undertaking to maximize control of information and, therefore, cash-flow. The proposed changes by the "new" OCLC, which give it internal control over any member library's catalog, run counter to the communitarian and public service ethos which has informed librarians and their work literally for centuries. These policy changes must be reversed, and OCLC management must remember that their company is supposed to serve libraries, not control them.
635.
BWS Johnson
December 18, 2008
Our Company Loves Cash! I've long toyed with the idea of asking after a probe into OCLC's non profit status.
634.
Michael Piper
December 18, 2008
633.
Alison Johnson
December 18, 2008
OCLC should adopt Google's motto: "Don't be evil."
632.
Kendra Ritchie
December 18, 2008
631.
Matthew Poe
December 18, 2008
I believe this license goes against the spirit of libraries.
630.
James Reynolds
December 17, 2008
629.
Michael McCulley
December 17, 2008
This is the a landgrab move, taking what users contributed (their own intellectual work) to a group consortium they *pay to use* and then having the consortium expressly take ownership of their work and contribution, and seeking to limit further use of it. The group "work" as a whole belongs to all the members, and truly, to all openly who love and seek books and bibliographic and holdings information.
628.
Nancy Milligan
December 17, 2008
627.
Keaney Chow
December 17, 2008
Ownership of data collaborated upon by others doesn't make sense to me, so I oppose this change.
626.
Lisa Sanders
December 17, 2008
As a cataloger of both monographs and serials in academic and public libraries, I resent the fact that you are trying to profit from the work that others have done--work that we did in the good faith that our work would be accessible to other non-profits and libraries. Shame on you!
625.
Robin Johnson
December 17, 2008
Inability to use data via Z39.50 for my own personal home library (1000+ items).
624.
Kelly Kish
December 16, 2008
623.
Cynthia Bowen
December 16, 2008
622.
Carole Breakstone
December 16, 2008
621.
Amy Ranger
December 16, 2008
I am an independent cataloger, providing my services to libraries that may not be OCLC members. I am not an OCLC member. Access to WorldCat records ensures that work is not done twice (or more) and that all libraries are able to share and share alike. Please don't be a bully. You're better than that, OCLC.
620.
Elizabeth Bennefeld
December 16, 2008
As a writer, I object to OCLC's appropriating other people's work/materials and claiming that it's their own. The materials shared by the libraries were made available to be shared freely.
619.
Cole Banning
December 16, 2008
618.
Farah Mendlesohn
December 16, 2008
617.
Robin Reid
December 16, 2008
As an academic and a writer and a fan, I am completely opposed to this attempt to create a monopoly on collaboratively created information in a process supported by public funds.
616.
Kelly Beranger
December 16, 2008
615.
Julio Flores
December 16, 2008
The church I pastor operates a community library (ca 5,000 volumes). Staffed entirely by volunteers we depend on publicly available records for our catalogue. I have a personal library of similar size that will evenutally pass on to the church.
614.
Audrey Hamelers
December 16, 2008
As a lifetime library user and future librarian, I am horrified by this business's attempt to own such a big part of our library system—something that should belong to everyone.
613.
Danielle Parsons
December 16, 2008
612.
Heidi Popovic
December 16, 2008
611.
Easter Smith
December 16, 2008
610.
Anirvan Chatterjee
December 16, 2008
The free flow of cataloging information enriches every part of the literary ecosystem.
609.
Matthew Hamilton
December 15, 2008
Open up our community property!
608.
Inger Svindahl
December 15, 2008
This records are stolen from the legal owners and by whose power I don't understand, but it looks like a criminal decition are made by someone.
607.
Tina Maes
December 14, 2008
As a cataloger in training, this makes me worried about the job market into which I will eventually try to go. If the libraries, already underfunded, then have to pay more to get books cataloged, there will be even fewer open positions out there. Considering we're already in an economic recession, I wonder why I'm spending the money I am to get a job that may not exist when I am done.
606.
Kat Walsh
December 14, 2008
OCLC is taking unfair advantage of the work that thousands upon thousands of users and librarians have been doing under the impression that it was a cooperative effort. Now that OCLC doesn't want to cooperate with the organizations it's supposed to serve, it's creating a bottleneck so that people are going to have to waste enormous amounts of time and effort to get back what they already had.
605.
Andreas Praefcke
December 14, 2008
Mere storing data and delivering it should not make anyone a proprietor of the data. This is a perverse idea of copyright and sharing knowledgte for that I only have contempt. Copyright was once introduced to protect the work of creative minds, not those of bureaucratic data miners.
604.
Daniel Smith
December 14, 2008
This is an abuse - of American freedoms, of the constitution, of my personal taxpayer dollars, and more. Copyright law explicitly states that works of the US government are in the public domain from the moment of conception. I don't think any law or license has the right to overturn this or grandfather in information from the past.
603.
N. SHAPIRO
December 14, 2008
602.
Sean Burns
December 14, 2008
601.
Forest Gregg
December 14, 2008
600.
Donna Hamilton
December 14, 2008
I'm a librarian at a public library and a former book publishing professional, and this negatively affects access to public information.
599.
Stephen De Gabrielle
December 13, 2008
598.
Jacob Remes
December 13, 2008
597.
Mathew Whitney
December 13, 2008
596.
John Chiafalo
December 13, 2008
595.
Keith Smith
December 13, 2008
594.
Bo Orloff
December 13, 2008
593.
Susan Dunn
December 12, 2008
As a librarian and self-professed bookworm, this move flies in the face of all that libraries represent in fostering access to and diffusion of information and resources.
592.
Malik Grohse
December 12, 2008
It is insane to take the concept of property rights to this narrow sense. It flies against everything that promotes cultural growth.
591.
Simon Watkins
December 12, 2008
590.
Timothy Broekhuizen
December 12, 2008
589.
Jeremy Hedley
December 12, 2008
588.
Janiece Mondale
December 12, 2008
As a former government librarian, it saddens me to see OCLC resort to this practice to make money.
587.
Stephanie Sullivan
December 12, 2008
I thought as library personel, we were supposed to be a service.
586.
Jacques Brenier
December 11, 2008
This is a disappointing trend. But hey, if OCLC is not in the sharing mood, we can always make our own FREE database, and in time it will be better.
585.
Michael Rodgers
December 11, 2008
This is evil.
584.
Mona Luxion
December 11, 2008
As a library user and academic, freedom of information – particularly the information needed to do research – is vital to me. Please do not compromise this essential right.
583.
Rachel Wright
December 11, 2008
582.
Daniel Weinberg
December 11, 2008
581.
Bess Walker
December 11, 2008
As a library user, I'm deeply concerned with the way that the new OCLC licence would effectively assume ownership of records that, by and large, are the creations of the libraries themselves. OCLC is a service, not (in large part) a content creator, and should not be attempting this underhanded way of controlling content that passes through their hands.
580.
Gerald Truman
December 11, 2008
Our library is growing but still too small to afford the elitism of OCLC services as they exist today. Actions like those proposed will shut out and shut down small libraries from the great public domain resources needed to stay alive.
579.
Tad Deffler
December 11, 2008
578.
Deborah Hahn
December 11, 2008
577.
Shannon Walker
December 11, 2008
I am a library science student who is appalled by the terms OCLC is trying to enforce. As a taxpayer, I have invested in LC, public universities, and local libraries which contribute records to what was intended to be a cooperative venture. OCLC has every right to control access to its services, but it does NOT have the right to claim that transfers to commercial users must be shut down or that "use must not discourage the contribution of bibliographic and holdings data to WorldCat or substantially replicate the function, purpose, and/or size of WorldCat." If the value added by OCLC is so tremendous, then it need not fear a "substantial replication" by open-source, commercial, or other efforts. As it stands, I see an organization run contrary to the special non-profit exemption granted by the Ohio legislature and granting minimal consultation with the community of librarians they serve. Partnership with Google Book Search may "drive users to libraries," but it is not an excuse to shut down access to all others who don't pay Google prices.
576.
Jane Rothstein
December 11, 2008
575.
Kathleen Phillips
December 11, 2008
574.
Jeremy Kahn
December 11, 2008
I am a student and scholar and I want the information I use to be available to myself and others regardless of our affiliation (or not) with a library that is willing to pay OCLC's fees.
573.
Susan Garbarino
December 10, 2008
I am the head of a small academic library. We rely upon OCLC Worldcat records for reference and cataloging. If you start charging for viewing Worldcat records, you will only make yourselves obselete since people find other sources for this information and will stop using your products. In addition, this conduct is reprehensible. It is nothing short of a breach of contract with the thousands of libraries who created this shared data. Get ready for the lawsuits if you pursue this business model. OCLC did not create this content and does not own it.
572.
Ned Morrell
December 10, 2008
571.
Laura Gaulzetti
December 10, 2008
570.
Tim Dedeaux
December 10, 2008
569.
Linda Bills
December 10, 2008
568.
John Morse
December 10, 2008
567.
Anne Schlitt
December 10, 2008
I have my MLS and I am an avid LibraryThing user--I don't like to see information made less accessible, especially in this day and age. I hope that OCLC will reconsider.
566.
Brian Kern
December 10, 2008
565.
Paul Berauer
December 10, 2008
564.
Glen Davis
December 10, 2008
As a taxpayer, I am outraged at the terms of the new policy. The data should be made available free of charge to anyone for any purpose.
563.
Amanda Keen
December 10, 2008
We are living in a world where information becomes more and more available. Trying to monopolize in this fashion may work - for a little while. At some point, those who use your information will become fed up and will create a different means of doing the same thing, and their way will be better. You will be left in the cold. It has happened many times since the internet's beginning; you will not be immune.
562.
George Duimovich
December 10, 2008
561.
Angela Constant
December 10, 2008
560.
Nathan Paxton
December 10, 2008
I am a professional academic and researcher. It's hard enough to get the information I need at costs that libraries and other information serives can bear (and I use the second largest library in the country). Asserting ownership over the information that helps us figure out what information shows how the world works sounds unfair, at the very least. Besides that, this change will give OCLC monopoly-like power over meta-information. But, if OCLC is so good, why fear a little competition?
559.
Christine Dearden
December 10, 2008
558.
Lance Brown
December 10, 2008
557.
Sarah Smee
December 10, 2008
556.
Lenora Lundquist
December 10, 2008
555.
Douglas Hampton
December 10, 2008
Shameful. Positively shameful. You're just like those in power. You have completely forgotten what the US Constitution means. The sad thing is, you're all just to stupid and greedy to notice.
554.
Randy Orrison
December 10, 2008
553.
Jonathan Cohen
December 10, 2008
I make use of numerous services on the Internet which make use of "OCLC's" data, e.g., LibraryThing. Once OCLC begins to enforce its odious policies, these services would go under, greatly inconveniencing me and many other users who have accumulated metadata,
552.
Jonathan Kaus
December 10, 2008
551.
Bonnie Dixon
December 10, 2008
550.
Rachel Clarke
December 10, 2008
549.
Stephen Singer
December 10, 2008
I am a professional researcher. I work with non-profits, many of them small and public service or education oriented. Open, unrestricted, low cost or free data of all kinds is essential to my work as are the public institutions that house and disseminate it. The policy change would hurt me and my constituents and clients.
548.
Jan Chciuk-Celt
December 10, 2008
547.
Kristin McLane
December 10, 2008
546.
Carla Curtis
December 9, 2008
545.
Molly Cronin
December 9, 2008
MLS student. anything that hinders sharing of records in this web 2.0 world can't be good.
544.
kati nolfi
December 9, 2008
543.
Anneh Fletcher
December 9, 2008
542.
Mark Meiss
December 9, 2008
It is flat-out morally wrong to claim property rights over cataloguing information created by member institutions. The entire idea of the OCLC in the first place was to facilitate the *sharing* of this data, and to make all use proprietary accomplishes nothing except to ensure that the project will die.
541.
Bonnie Swoger
December 9, 2008
540.
Andree Howard
December 9, 2008
539.
Jane Rawson
December 9, 2008
538.
Johanna Wood
December 9, 2008
537.
Angelo Pugliese
December 9, 2008
Unbelievable! OCLC takes free info from all possible sources and wants to sell it back to them! This is not smart (as they may think): it is CRIMINAL !!!
536.
Sara Rickaby
December 9, 2008
535.
Jean Bergerot
December 9, 2008
534.
Rick Mason
December 9, 2008
533.
Jennifer McGaffey
December 9, 2008
I'm affected only through my use of institutions that use OCLC cataloging - I became aware through LibraryThing, I'm not sure if my local libraries use OCLC. But, even leaving aside the question of the OCLC charging for LOC (legally required to be free for use) and individual libraries' cataloging work - in a practical sense, in the current economy and short budgets for libraries, this charging-for-everything idea sounds like the best way to guarantee that libraries find other methods or do without.
532.
Magnus Berg
December 8, 2008
Restricting access to such basic information is reprehensible. The simple fact is that it is unnecessary and indeed immoral for any one public entity to own library information.
531.
Melanie Bopp
December 8, 2008
530.
Luke Hackenberg
December 8, 2008
529.
Kirsten Hensley
December 8, 2008
528.
Karl Wurst
December 8, 2008
527.
Jeff Kosokoff
December 8, 2008
Not mine, not yours, not theirs....
526.
Katie Dixon
December 8, 2008
I am a librarian responsible for creating the first computerized catalog for a private school library that has thousands of books but no card catalog. My job would be impossible without access to these resources. Don't you see that your are limiting knowledge? Why would you want to do that?
525.
James Loyd
December 8, 2008
While I'm a huge supporter of capitalism and the free market, charging people for access to records they helped create themselves (and gave to OCLC for free) is just theft.
524.
Jonathan Clark
December 8, 2008
This data should be in the public domain
523.
Spencer Harris
December 8, 2008
522.
David Mackinder
December 8, 2008
I find it hard to see how restricting access to bibliographical information can further humane scholarship and intellectual endeavour . . .
521.
Tina Gross
December 8, 2008
520.
Deborah Doyle
December 8, 2008
I agree firmly with Lord Acton: "Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
519.
Geraldine Dickel
December 8, 2008
518.
Shelley Monson
December 8, 2008
As a librarian, and as frequent user of both Open Library and LibraryThing, this move on the part of OCLC will significantly limit my options. I consider it to be data theft.
517.
John Graham
December 8, 2008
516.
Megan Siclari
December 8, 2008
515.
Robert Bothmann
December 8, 2008
514.
Jessica Schomberg
December 8, 2008
513.
Carol Huff
December 8, 2008
I have a small personal library that needs a catalog to use it most effectively. I also allow others from a non profit group come in and use the books for free. Again without a good cataloging system, it is not as useful. The open use of cataloging data (that others have done) is a great boon and saves me from reinventing the wheel.
512.
Virginia Heinrich
December 8, 2008
This essentially places our library cataloging into a "work for hire" contract, which is not what we entered when we entered our COOPERATIVE venture with OCLC years ago. I represent community college libraries for our OCLC Regional Library Provider (MINITEX), and will be recommending that MINITEX take action against OCLC should their policy proposal stand.
511.
Timothy Crawford
December 8, 2008
I spend a great deal of time searching out information on books. I have already paid for this information to be generated by the public libraries that generate the data using my tax dollars. Why should I have to pay again, through higher fees, to use that data?
510.
Daniel Lovins
December 8, 2008
As a librarian who contributes to OCLC records, I object to their claiming ownership. Also, I agree with Glyn Moody in the Linux Journal (12/5/08), that "releasing large quantities of primary data for free allows all kinds of innovate secondary uses to be developed, some of which can be exploited commercially, but without needing to close off the primary materials or charge for them." For the benefit of library users and even OCLC itself (since the current business model is not sustainable) they should be making money from the secondary uses only.
509.
Deborah Kaplan
December 8, 2008
Among all of the practical ways this will change the way I use library resources, there's the simple question of right and wrong. I'm a taxpayer in this country. As a taxpayer, I know that all of the information gathered by the Library of Congress and by the local public libraries which create the intellectual content of the records managed by OCLC should be in the public domain. That's the law, and OCLC is trying to do an end run around the law with its licensing terms. The intellectual content of these records is the property of the public, and needs to remain that way.
508.
Jenica Rogers-Urbanek
December 8, 2008
507.
Emily Janoski
December 8, 2008
506.
Ann Lynch
December 8, 2008
505.
Elizabeth Nerbonne
December 8, 2008
These records were created by thousands of people, and you have no right to claim ownership of them.
504.
Michael Straatmann
December 8, 2008
503.
Rosalyn Metz
December 8, 2008
502.
Andreas Wagner
December 8, 2008
I am helping with the administration and programming of an institutional repository of a large academic research organisation in Germany (I am completely unaware if my university's library is an oclc member) and while I find the thought of open data interchange fascinating and try to handle as many APIs/formats/protocols as feasible, I do fear that precisely because of the uncontrollable (but intended) use of the APIs by users and third parties, I am aiming at a system which would be (or eventually come) into conflict with your new licence terms.
501.
Claire Connelly
December 8, 2008
As a system administrator, library user, an avid reader, a collector of books, and a contributor to crowd-sourced book information, access to library records derived from the work of public institutions as well as my friends and colleagues is vital. The OCLC is attempting to fence off a huge portion of the commons created by tax-payer funded libraries and the library and book community, with no justification for doing so other than their own self-interest.
500.
Kindree Knoepfle
December 8, 2008
499.
John Byers
December 8, 2008
498.
Drogheda NiFaolain
December 8, 2008
This is an outrageous move on your part, in direct conflict with the mission of library services to connect people and not-for-profit organizations with needed information, regardless of ability to pay. In addition, if you persist in this new policy, you will be making yourselves obsolete as librarians and other skilled individuals will (re)create their own records and distribution system, if they must. As someone who has contributed records to OCLC's database, I am beyond astonished that you would disrespect information professionals and United States taxpayers in this manner.
497.
Michelle McHugh
December 8, 2008
496.
Adri Edwards-Johnson
December 8, 2008
I work in two libraries - one public, one special collections - I'm also an adjunct instructor at the local SLIS. This is not in the best interest of libraries and shows that OCLC has no interest other than their bottom line at heart. What I would really love to see is LC stick a CC license on the MARC record and try force it to be share-alike and non-commercial. I'm tired of unscrupulous people profiting off of public funded data (MARC included).
495.
Sara Gore
December 8, 2008
494.
Peter Marquis-Kyle
December 8, 2008
493.
Erika Ward
December 8, 2008
492.
Reverend Margo Steurer
December 8, 2008
491.
Mary Bernard
December 8, 2008
I am an educator and I use worldcat extensively to find books for my curricula.
490.
Cathy Mullican
December 7, 2008
489.
Colin Bischoff
December 7, 2008
488.
William Sampson
December 7, 2008
Hi, I'm an infomation studies graduate student, and as someone studying the field, this strikes me as an outrageous and wholly unnecessary change in policy of the OCLC. Your service is excellent, but you certainly cannot set the terms of use for the information contained therein: it is not your information. Please reconsider this policy.
487.
Laura Carns
December 7, 2008
Monopolies discourage technological advancement and competition, even in the not-for-profit environment.
486.
Samantha Lester
December 7, 2008
485.
Cornell Stamoran
December 7, 2008
As a corporate librarian and a bookseller as well, I find this kind of activity almost unbelievable. The FTC would not allow it to occur in the for-profit world, as it would be a restraint of trade. In this case, however, it seems a restraint of knowleldge instead, as as such, in this global age of boundary-less knowledge sharing, unforgivable.
484.
Amanda Feist
December 7, 2008
483.
Theodore Jackson
December 7, 2008
I want free access to records provided by MY tax-funded library of congress!
482.
Bonnie Wessler
December 7, 2008
The purpose of a library is the free exchange of information and information about information. In this age of open-source software, the internet, and grassroots information-sharing ad-hoc networks, the very last thing an organization should be doing is trying to make information more exclusive- this move is that of an aging organization out of touch with the population it is meant to serve.
481.
Erin Sweeney
December 7, 2008
480.
Deborah Wells-Clinton
December 7, 2008
479.
Shannon Doerfler
December 7, 2008
I belong to LibraryThing and I don't want them to have to pay to use FREE knowledge.
478.
Bradley Kuhn
December 7, 2008
477.
Jen Moore
December 7, 2008
As a library school student interested in the application of new technologies to libraries, I have to say, this was not what I had in mind.
476.
Carrie Pirmann
December 7, 2008
475.
Jim Darlack
December 7, 2008
474.
David Clay
December 7, 2008
473.
Andrea Garvey
December 7, 2008
I am a library science student.
472.
John Koehnle
December 7, 2008
471.
Petr Zabicka
December 7, 2008
470.
Lorin Salem
December 7, 2008
I am a LibraryThing member and am very concerned about what effect these new rules may have on my membership there.
469.
Stephanie Martin
December 7, 2008
468.
Jane Showalter
December 7, 2008
467.
Jane Estrada
December 7, 2008
466.
Quinn Dombrowski
December 7, 2008
465.
Barbara Trumpinski-Roberts
December 7, 2008
As a library staff member I use Worldcat as part of my job. As an individual reader and subscriber to worldcat.org I find the service invaluable for locating material and being able to retrieve it. It is unethical for OCLC to make use of work that has come from hundreds of catalogers and deny those catalogers the right to their own work. Please rethink this policy.
464.
Michael McDonnell
December 7, 2008
OCLC should know that this kind of activity will damage, perhaps for decades or centuries the ability for libraries to share information and to go about doing their day-to-day jobs. This kind of intellectual piracy must not be allowed to stand.
463.
Nora Livengood
December 7, 2008
462.
Billy Brame
December 7, 2008
This is an outrageous monopolization of information. The OCLC should not have exclusive rights to this data. No one should profit from making data exclusive. This is counter to the vision of libraries the world over and the spirit of the internet.
461.
Charlotte MacMurray
December 7, 2008
460.
Elizabeth McKeeman
December 7, 2008
459.
Kimmo Suominen
December 7, 2008
User of libraries and LibraryThing.com
458.
Michael Hanel
December 7, 2008
457.
Bethany Nummela-Hanel
December 7, 2008
456.
Laura Michet
December 7, 2008
455.
Anna Mickelsen
December 7, 2008
Information in and about books should be free for all and accessible to all.
454.
Matthew Lieder
December 7, 2008
I use LibraryThing, and also generally hate excessive copyrighting that hurts much more than it protects.
453.
Ash Brown
December 7, 2008
452.
Alexander Gieg
December 7, 2008
As someone who's spent valuable time researching OCLC codes and adding them to book entries in Wikipedia articles, I feel insulted and offended by having done work that will benefit a single entity rather than the advance free and unrestricted access to information all over the world. As a free market advocate I'm far from opposed to corporations, for profit or not. But I'm absolutely opposed to corporations using small print tricks to attain legal monopoly status. With this move OCLC certainly is showing the worst that someone positioned in the touching point of the private and public spheres can do.
451.
Eleanor Wroblewski
December 7, 2008
450.
Anders Dahnielson
December 7, 2008
449.
Steve Pugh
December 7, 2008
448.
Beanbag Amerika
December 7, 2008
447.
Jodi Schneider
December 6, 2008
446.
Justin Langhorst
December 6, 2008
445.
connie alesse
December 4, 2008
The shared cataloging system and database that Fred Kilgour created was perfect in its simplicity and pure in its motives. Let's dispense with the strategic planning, research and other PR gobble-d-gook and return to the original model so that libraries all of sizes, shapes and incomes can continue this important work of sharing information.
444.
Heather Stone
December 4, 2008
I am currently working on a volunteer project to catalog the library at a residential school for children who have been removed from their homes. We cannot even afford bar codes for the project, never mind OCLC services. This is a monopoly that needs to be reigned in.
443.
Kathryn Matfield
December 4, 2008
442.
Joe Slag
December 4, 2008
441.
Susan Jane Golding
December 4, 2008
440.
Brett Kochendorfer
December 2, 2008
439.
Aaron Wood
December 2, 2008
438.
Steve Lawson
December 2, 2008
437.
Suzanne Davis
December 2, 2008
I am a librarian, and I am horrified at this unconscionable greed!
436.
Nicolas Morin
December 2, 2008
435.
Elise Blas
December 1, 2008
434.
Rosalie Blake
December 1, 2008
433.
Ema Jacob
December 1, 2008
432.
Joann Ransom
December 1, 2008
A fundamental principle of libraries is the free transfer of knowledge.
431.
Carol Connell Cannon
December 1, 2008
I am the director of a small public library in NJ. We use the WorldCat records to locate items outside of the state, and to verify bibliographic info. We can't afford another fee. Our budgets are stretched as thin as possible. World Cat was a collaboration of libraries. It is wrong to charge for other people's work, especially when they gave freely it for the greater good of all libraries!
430.
Chloe Lewis
December 1, 2008
429.
Joshua Neff
November 30, 2008
I would like to think OCLC is on the side of libraries and free information, but they're acting like they're anything but. It's very sad.
428.
Nicole Engard
November 30, 2008
I have worked very very hard on hundreds of records that are part of WorldCat and that work should be mine to do with as I please.
427.
David Chambers
November 30, 2008
426.
David Montgomery
November 29, 2008
425.
Jirah Cox
November 28, 2008
424.
james Izurieta
November 28, 2008
423.
Ann Matsuuchi
November 28, 2008
422.
Caitlin Gelin-Milam
November 28, 2008
Libraries cannot afford to have their resources tied up by a monopoly! We need to provide free access to as many people as possible.
421.
Tim Bock
November 27, 2008
I don't like it that OCLC is trying to maintain its monopoly in this field.
420.
Kristin Dancke
November 27, 2008
419.
Lars Lørdahl
November 26, 2008
418.
Anna Kirsten Nygaard
November 26, 2008
417.
Pål Magnus Lykkja
November 26, 2008
416.
SANDHYA B.C.
November 26, 2008
415.
Jonathan Campbell
November 25, 2008
414.
Mads Munthe-Kaas
November 25, 2008
413.
Asta Louise Myr
November 25, 2008
412.
Monita Shastri
November 25, 2008
411.
Hanumappa Anil Kumar
November 25, 2008
In todays knowledge based economy opening up WorldCat for educational and non-profit institutions world wide is the only 'right thing' to do for OCLC.
410.
Katherine White
November 24, 2008
409.
Don Barry
November 24, 2008
As an academic (I'm an astronomer at Cornell University), I'm astonished to learn how OCLC has strayed from its roots. I encourage it to return to a service organization working for libraries rather than the alternative. And if it cannot reform, I encourage libraries strongly to reject its monopoly and reform a new free-information cooperative with which to peer-share their metadata.
408.
Jenn Su
November 24, 2008
407.
Ryan Prior
November 24, 2008
Our public libraries are one of our most precious resources. We cannot let these valuable records be so tied up!
406.
Lauren Swift
November 23, 2008
405.
Mark Baker
November 22, 2008
404.
Carson Mischel
November 22, 2008
403.
paul nguyen
November 22, 2008
402.
stefaan verhalle
November 22, 2008
work from public domain should remain free.
401.
Charlotte Mulliner
November 22, 2008
400.
Michael Duffy
November 22, 2008
399.
Bindu Bhatt
November 21, 2008
398.
Dan Lavielle
November 21, 2008
397.
Dorrie Slutsker
November 21, 2008
396.
David Corney
November 21, 2008
As a regular user of local library services (in Southwark), I'm concerned about excess costs charged, which limits the libraries effectiveness.
395.
Ambrose Li
November 21, 2008
394.
Jessica Finefrock
November 21, 2008
393.
Matthew Fowle
November 21, 2008
392.
Mike O'Brien
November 21, 2008
391.
Gareth Jordan
November 20, 2008
390.
Michael Ang
November 20, 2008
Open access to library records is in the public interest!
389.
Jon Crump
November 20, 2008
Collection and the subsequent deployment of enhanced bibliographic information is at the core of what scholarship is. Without institutional affiliation, and without big pots of money, it has become increasingly difficult to do the basic work of scholarship even before this policy change. Throwing open the doors to commonly held property can benefit us all, OCLC included. The harder OCLC works at holding open those doors, the more people will walk through them. For those in the information business, restricting the flow of information is just a slow form of suicide. I'm not a librarian, I'm a scholar who uses libraries. When my library's job gets harder and more expensive, my job gets harder and more expensive.
388.
Bob Persing
November 20, 2008
387.
Mark Tanner
November 20, 2008
This information should be freely available to the public.
386.
Deborah Babb
November 20, 2008
385.
Paivi Rentz
November 20, 2008
384.
Nathaniel Tapley
November 20, 2008
383.
Michael Blackburn BA MA FRSA
November 20, 2008
Making people pay to upload their information then charging them to access it is a great business model but an affront to decency.
382.
Robert Kelly
November 20, 2008
I am a director of a community college library. I have felt for a few years now, as I've seen OCLC buy up competitors and raise fees, that OCLC has morphed from an organization for, by, and about it's members into a commercial vendor not unlike an Ebsco, Gale, ProQuest. I see, in using CatExpress for cataloging, that we pay to contribute records and we pay to access them via WorldCat. Essentially we pay to contribute our capital and pay to access it. As open source and other technological alternatives have cropped up, I'm seeing there isn't a reason to continue participating in OCLC. The biggest issue for many is for a more open software to be created for national and international resource sharing. Once universities and large public libraries adopt such new processes, worldcat will no longer be commercially viable.
381.
Cindy McConachie
November 20, 2008
380.
Mick Davies
November 20, 2008
379.
Chris Isaac
November 20, 2008
378.
Igor Brbre
November 20, 2008
377.
James Mewis
November 20, 2008
376.
Cliff Hammett
November 20, 2008
375.
Stephen Robinson
November 20, 2008
374.
Ed Hayes
November 20, 2008
373.
Shobha Kulkarni
November 20, 2008
No body can claim the exclusive rights over the accumulated knowledge.
372.
Karen Coronado
November 20, 2008
371.
Lindsey Nichols
November 19, 2008
370.
Sarah Menzies
November 19, 2008
This policy is surely completely at odds with OCLC's stated objectives.
369.
Paula Smith
November 19, 2008
368.
Sonja Mollison
November 19, 2008
Absurd, dangerous, negligent. This cannot happen and must be reversed at any cost. The library must be placed back into the hands of people who do not gain personally. I will not drop this torch, thank you for passing it.
367.
marianne watson
November 19, 2008
366.
Ledezma Rodriguez
November 19, 2008
Please stop now, help save our libraries!
365.
Elaine Ball
November 19, 2008
How it affects me!? I'm a tax-paying citizen of the United States, and libraries affect us ALL! I want the system to stay as free as it has been. EVERYONE deserves equal access to libraries and information, even and perhaps especially the poor who couldn't afford these services!
364.
Jeri Linsteadt
November 19, 2008
363.
Miranda Shaw
November 19, 2008
Please change this back. The cost to public libraries is detrimental and will keep local libraries from providing as much information.
362.
Ava Iuliano
November 19, 2008
Information belongs to the people, not a corporation!
361.
Christina Arcuri
November 19, 2008
360.
Mark Leggott
November 19, 2008
359.
kathleen swanson
November 19, 2008
I find it repugnant that OCLC fins it profitable to charge libraries and wants an information monopoly. Expanding one's mind through available information is one of our greatest liberties and what our nation was founded on!! Our country should not be about greed for the rich, but freedoms for all!!
358.
Brian Herzog
November 19, 2008
357.
sam freund
November 19, 2008
It's so absurd it almost sounds like a hoax. Fight the OCLC power!
356.
Michael Braun Hamilton
November 19, 2008
As a current MLS student concerned with the future of our profession, I find this OCLC policy troubling. I have great respect for what OCLC has brought to the library world and hope that they will reconsider this decision.
355.
brian daisey
November 18, 2008
Libraries should be free to the people. End of story. Its content should also be free, period.
354.
Sian Fording
November 18, 2008
353.
Donald Schmitz
November 18, 2008
352.
Jenna Hecker
November 18, 2008
351.
Lindsey Knight
November 18, 2008
350.
Ben Campbell
November 18, 2008
349.
Chip Kruthoffer
November 18, 2008
348.
Abby Blachly
November 18, 2008
347.
Andrey Fedorov
November 18, 2008
346.
Tim Dennis
November 18, 2008
345.
Edwin Mijnsbergen
November 18, 2008
Information has to be free! Libraries & Librarians need systems to be open in order to survive...
344.
Eduardo Amador
November 18, 2008
343.
Lauren Colucci
November 18, 2008
342.
David King
November 18, 2008
Agreed - OCLC doesn't own any records. They simply host them, much like Google hosts website content.
341.
Mahesh Atchi
November 18, 2008
340.
basanta das
November 18, 2008
339.
Fredrik Heintz
November 18, 2008
338.
PI Norton
November 18, 2008
337.
Martha Hardy
November 18, 2008
336.
Mary Brown
November 18, 2008
335.
Marilyn Smithson
November 18, 2008
334.
Guy Dickinson
November 18, 2008
333.
Christopher Hanusa
November 18, 2008
332.
Emily Tryforos
November 18, 2008
331.
Mary Conway
November 17, 2008
330.
Amy Rogers
November 17, 2008
I understand the need to re-coup the costs of maintaining the master catalog, but not the cost that they are charging to libraries when the information is free to all.
329.
Scott Nicolson
November 17, 2008
328.
Kristin Everson
November 17, 2008
327.
Peggy Schmitz
November 17, 2008
This is totally outrageous...it could undermine public libraries altogether. i hope it can be stopped.
326.
Heather Hopkins
November 17, 2008
This is just completely wrong. I am a librarian who really believes nonprofits should have access to WorldCat records. Have a heart, OCLC
325.
Benjamin Elgin
November 17, 2008
324.
amanda harlan
November 17, 2008
323.
Bonnie Brzozowski
November 17, 2008
322.
Tanya Jo Ormseth
November 17, 2008
321.
Patricia Selinger
November 17, 2008
320.
Laura Mueller
November 17, 2008
319.
Cindy Kristof
November 17, 2008
318.
Misty Hopper
November 17, 2008
317.
Douglas Clinton
November 17, 2008
316.
Beverly Rupe
November 17, 2008
315.
Jonathan Horn
November 17, 2008
I am an independent researcher and regularly need to access catalog information to search for new resources. Since I am not affiliated with any institution, I do not have access to institutional resources. This new policy would freeze out all individuals such as myself who do not have access to the resources of an institution, yet who would still like to contribute to academic discourse.
314.
Daniel Shively
November 17, 2008
313.
Michele Shumow
November 17, 2008
312.
Russell Johnson
November 17, 2008
This just goes hand in hand with the cutting out of the local offices that interface between OCLC and libraries. "Grab what you can a little at a timec and soon you have it all" seems to be the new mantra at OCLC.
311.
Gary Harris
November 17, 2008
It makes me ill read about OCLC's efforts to predominate the very group of people and institutions that it should be supporting, not mention that its entire bibliographic infrastructure was built on the backs of thousands of librarian in the US and around the world.
310.
Michael Monaco
November 17, 2008
As a cataloger at a major public library, my work is paid for by tax dollars and done for the public benefit. Making my work property of OCLC violates the spirit and purpose of public libraries and librarianship as a profession.
309.
Melissa Martinez
November 17, 2008
OCLC shouldn't be allowed a monopoly on records they didn't create, and probably don't own under copyright. I hope they will reconsider and instead work to better their database, products & support, all of which would help keep them competitive in their market.
308.
Diana Coker
November 17, 2008
307.
Bonita Archer
November 17, 2008
306.
Angel Rivera
November 17, 2008
305.
Scot Colford
November 17, 2008
We're trying to break silos, not create them. I am appalled that OCLC behaves more like a private vendor than a cooperative as each year passes.
304.
Allison Etzel
November 17, 2008
303.
Travis Bailey
November 17, 2008
302.
Linda Turney
November 17, 2008
I believe that records in OCLC are owned by every library that contributes original cataloging records and also enhanced records. Every contributed record should be available to all libraries without any restrictions.
301.
Brooke Ward
November 17, 2008
As a librarian I have seen how OCLC is damaging the quality of services provided by libraries-- especially small ones like ours with small budgets. Libraries are about freedom!
300.
Ellen Mueller
November 17, 2008
299.
Gus Gollings
November 17, 2008
298.
Ray Cruitt
November 17, 2008
297.
Barbara Fister
November 17, 2008
This move is contrary to library values.
296.
Robert Layton
November 17, 2008
295.
Anna Smith
November 17, 2008
294.
Mark Jamieson
November 17, 2008
As a working researcher and teacher this seriously concerns me.
293.
Cory Bailey
November 17, 2008
Information should be free and open. Those are the very tenants of why we work with the community as librarians. By closing information off, we damage not only the library services, but our community as a whole.
292.
Ratna Saha
November 17, 2008
291.
Mark Leahy
November 17, 2008
As a university instructor, the availability (and cost) of materials comes to bear on what I am able to teach. Because of current restrictions, I am already far too limited. No more.
290.
Susan Swartz
November 17, 2008
I feel that the records in my local library should be open to the public and accessible on the web; I would also like to be able to access records across the country through sites such as Open Library.
289.
Mitch Suzne
November 17, 2008
288.
Papia Chakraborty
November 17, 2008
287.
Robert Thibault
November 17, 2008
286.
Grant Goodale
November 17, 2008
285.
karunakar n
November 17, 2008
284.
Amber Tucker
November 17, 2008
Please do not steal the work of many and use it as your own to make profit.
283.
Sage Ross
November 17, 2008
As a historian at Yale and a participant in the free culture movement, I see on a daily basis how arbitrary the social and institutional barriers that separate the haves from the have-nots in the modern ecology of knowledge. Libraries and their collections are our common heritage, and the limits on access for those outside the traditional groups that patronize and control the library system is increasingly holding back the production and use of knowledge. The catalogs need to be free for the cultural and technological innovators of today to use freely and easily, not to mention educational institutions on the periphery who are shut out by rising subscription costs.
282.
Shari Girouard
November 17, 2008
281.
Jacob Rus
November 17, 2008
Mostly through no virtue of my own, as a Harvard student I currently have unrivaled access to information: the largest academic library system in the world, subscriptions to every major electronic journal, and myriad other resources. Unfortunately, through a combination of various historical accidents, among them a broken copyright system and a current extreme power and information centralization, the vast majority throughout the world, to include myself in another couple of years, have much more limited access. Systems such as the Open Library--with goals of breaking down those distinctions and opening up access to that information to researchers and citizens worldwide--are thus crucial tools of the democratization of knowledge and ultimately drivers of economic and political progress. Any structures which stand in the way of such systems, whatever their intentions, should be opposed and if necessary dismantled. In such vein, OCLC should think long and hard about the likely state of technical and communication systems in 10 years, and find a business model which aligns it with those changes and advances them, rather than morphing into yet another obstructionist monopolist scrambling to save a dying profit base.
280.
Kerry Webb
November 17, 2008
Every system's death dimishes me, because I am involved with mankind.
279.
Tim Esau
November 17, 2008
This information must remain in the public domain. To privatize such a resource is wrong. As a graduate student, when I need to cite records I should not have to ALSO acknowledge ownership to WorldCat as it has no bearing on the subject at hand.
278.
Nicholas Pfost
November 17, 2008
It's the 21st century, OCLC! Knowledge is no longer power -- trust is. Please help us to trust you.
277.
Kelly Clowes
November 17, 2008
276.
Frank Stieber
November 16, 2008
275.
Joel Gilmore
November 16, 2008
If companies want unpaid user contributions, they need to respect their consumers!
274.
carlos lopez
November 16, 2008
As a creator of bibliographic records, and both a contributor to and beneficiary of cooperative cataloguing practice, I do not like the idea of OCLC "owning" the product of cataloguers' hard work for what look to be either business gain (even though OCLC hides behind their supposedly "not for profit" status, they certainly do charge large fees for their services) or business advantage (that is, trying to get rid of "competing" organisations like LibraryThing or the Open Library, which seem to me to be trying to do what OCLC only claims to do: To be organisations "dedicated to the public purposes of furthering access to the world’s information and reducing information costs." (OCLC home page, http://www.oclc.org/us/en/default.htm))
273.
emerson vandy
November 16, 2008
I work in a national library that partnered with OCLC a few years ago. This diverts funding from other projects in my (state-funded and tightly budgeted) library, and restricts our technical infrastructure.
272.
jona gerlach
November 16, 2008
271.
Josh Mock
November 16, 2008
270.
Alek Tarkowski
November 16, 2008
269.
Jeanne Poole
November 16, 2008
OCLC is truly owned directly by every library that contributes original cataloging and enhances records found in the utility and indirectly by any library that uses its records. Therefore, our concerns and needs should be the priority and out work should be easily available to each and everyone of us without any strictures or obstacles. Commercial entities are another matter.
268.
evan brown
November 16, 2008
267.
Frank Tobia
November 16, 2008
266.
Nathan Howell
November 16, 2008
265.
Pat Lawton
November 16, 2008
264.
Bria Parker
November 16, 2008
263.
Mary Keesling
November 16, 2008
OCLC, please be part of the solution, not part of the problem. I can't believe you are even thinking about doing this. It flies in the face of everything libraries stand for, especially in a democracy... information is the key to learning, and the foundation of democracy. I work in a public library in bib/support services; this would affect ALL libraries and library users directly.. and all of us ... Can't you be a beacon of light, instead of a monopoly?
262.
Catherine Lucy
November 16, 2008
261.
Anna Perleberg
November 16, 2008
260.
Greg Grossmeier
November 16, 2008
259.
sadie kadlec
November 16, 2008
I work at a library and our missions goes as follows: The City Library is a dynamic civic resource that promotes free and open access to information, materials and service to all members of the community to advance knowledge, foster creativity, encourage the exchange of ideas, build community and enhance the quality of life. OCLC goes against what many libraries stand for by taking a revolutionary service (that if used properly could enhance the unity of libraries across the globe) and augmenting it so that it degrades the work, concern and intention of these libraries for OCLC's own monopolistic motives. Libraries are here to be a resource to and for the community not to be exploited by a consortium that overtakes and deceives. We need to empower our civic resources not disable them.
258.
Jon Phillips
November 16, 2008
I help on http://openlibrary.org through Creative Commons pdwiki project.
257.
Chris Schaefer
November 16, 2008
I'm firm believer in open information.
256.
Hal Hildebrand
November 16, 2008
I literally cannot believe that OCLC believes it owns the catalog. What a load of hoseshit. For people who theoretically believe in the power of the written word and the ability for ideas to empower, OCLC has learned none of the lessons of history and has become a stereotypical wanker. Please stop wanking.
255.
Rebecca Brown
November 16, 2008
Working at a small library with very limited funding, it is becoming increasingly difficult to provide the services needed by our community and keep up with larger libraries. The sharing of records by larger libraries is one way that they assist smaller libraries and if we have to pay too much, then we will simply fall behind.
254.
Stephen Ohs
November 16, 2008
253.
Laura Grigg
November 16, 2008
252.
Mark Griffioen
November 16, 2008
251.
Hillary Berry-Griffioen
November 16, 2008
250.
David Penn
November 16, 2008
249.
David Penn
November 16, 2008
248.
Vickie White
November 16, 2008
247.
Carol Hassler
November 16, 2008
246.
Michael Fischer
November 16, 2008
OCLC, please stop being part of the problem instead of part of the solution. We will all benefit if your organisation focuses on how to improve access to the material rather than imposing barriers that may ultimately lead to the demise your organisation.
245.
Demeter Lamb
November 16, 2008
244.
Maximus Weikel
November 16, 2008
243.
SJ Klein
November 16, 2008
Please help archivists everywhere share access to and indexing of the world's knowledge. It matters most in places where they cannot possibly pay for this information.
242.
Wenonah Lyon
November 15, 2008
Extending the boundaries of what we know is aided by free access to information - libraries are the foundation of that access. No organization should have exclusive control of these records. Any nonprofit organization or library needs unrestricted access to all WorldCat records.
241.
Sam Kingston
November 15, 2008
240.
Dan Callaghan
November 15, 2008
As an avid reader and library user, I believe that the world's bibliographic data should be freely available to all, without restriction -- in the same spirit as libraries themselves.
239.
Steve Lyon
November 15, 2008
238.
Stephen Whitney
November 15, 2008
237.
Lisa Curt
November 15, 2008
open access please
236.
Kristen Seas
November 15, 2008
Education and cultural growth depends on the free exchange of ideas. If you restrict access to information simply for profit, then you violate the sentiment of sharing knowledge to better our society. Also, it's pretty well established now that any system that centralizes itself too much and closes itself off to outside fluctuations will inevitably die. You are only shooting yourselves in the foot. So back off, maintain the open access to WorldCat, and view the grassroots origins of this entire project as the driving force of its success and you'll be able to set an example for other companies - and thus survive.
235.
Saiphul Singh Bhullar
November 15, 2008
Anything that artificially and needlessly increases costs for such a crucial function of academia should go - particularly when those meager funds would be far better served buying books or improving the infrastructure of libraries.
234.
Coral Hess
November 15, 2008
Data that was made by libraries and collated by OCLC does not belong solely to OCLC, and for you to pretend otherwise is a serious breach of the trust we had in you and regard we had for you as an organization. The only way to regain the trust and regard of your member organizations is to repeal the changes.
233.
Hansen Bergamini
November 15, 2008
I have friends who are librarians, and this is bad for them.
232.
Cecily Martin
November 15, 2008
Several of my friends are librarians and it impedes their ability to do their work.
231.
Luisa Nino
November 15, 2008
I am a library student and I understand the huge impact of such a negative actions on libraries all over the world. It is just the opposite of the principles of a library: access to information. It is seriously unfortunate.
230.
Lucy Pearson
November 15, 2008
As somoene responsible for cataloguing a special collection in a small charitable organisation, I am deeply aware of how information sharing throughout the library world benefits organisations without the resources to employ a full team of specialist staff. I consider my sharing of unique bibliographic records to be a service to the library and academic worlds. While organisations such as OCLC have to consider their running costs, the attempt to claim ownership on intellectual property freely shared across the library community runs counter to the fundamental priciples of librarianship.
229.
David Caloren
November 15, 2008
228.
Michael Carrithers
November 15, 2008
227.
Joseph Mirarchi
November 15, 2008
OCLC, here, is trying to monopolize not information but information surrogates (pointers). If you cut out pointers to information, you won't be able to find it: think about what would happen if encyclopedias weren't in alphabetical order. The descriptive cataloging part here (how many pages a book has, who published it, how big it is, etc.) is debatably not unique enough to warrant copyright protection anyway.
226.
Daniel Thorson
November 15, 2008
As a library worker and a student I fully support this petition and its intent!
225.
Jeremy Goldstein
November 15, 2008
224.
Josh Graham
November 15, 2008
I work at a library and am naturally opposed to anything that tries to stretch it's control over the general flow of information. Anytime information starts coming at a price measured in money, freedom is lost. Beware the man who would deny you free access to information for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
223.
Gianluca Drago
November 15, 2008
222.
Michael Hohl
November 15, 2008
221.
Paul King
November 15, 2008
As a graduate of the Library and Information Science program at the University of Illinois and an advocate of the free software movement, I alarmed by OCLC activities. Any temporary monopoly they manage to establish will be short lived, however. The web is moving from a distributed resource of pages to a medium of semantic data transactions. Nonetheless, I will spread the word and do what I can to prevent the OCLC from any further vulgar efforts to privatize and capitalize on our public resources.
220.
Jonathan Breitbart
November 15, 2008
219.
Arup Raychaudhury
November 15, 2008
It is a crime. They are doing the business for too long. I am against this type of capturing CATALOG and then DOING Business.
218.
Seth Roberts
November 15, 2008
I use libraries for a lot of research, which is what I do for a living. Anything that makes libraries more expensive makes it harder for me to do my job.
217.
jessamyn west
November 15, 2008
the only way we're going to get records in VT is to get them shared by some org who already has them and is sharing them. We can't afford OCLC but we can figure out Open Library.
216.
timothy vollmer
November 15, 2008
215.
J. McRee (Mac) Elrod
November 15, 2008
We believe in the exchange of bibliographic records, contributing our own free to three different utilities. We see ourselves as selling our services, not downloaded records. Special Libraries Cataloguing, Inc.
214.
Devi A S L
November 15, 2008
Monopoly is never a good thing.
213.
Annette Burdges
November 15, 2008
212.
Greg Detre
November 15, 2008
211.
Joshua Sklar
November 15, 2008
It's deeply unfair to claim ownership to the work of others without compensation. I haven't seen OCLC paying libraries for making all this work available for you.
210.
michael covarrubias
November 15, 2008
My school already doesn't prioritize the resources I rely on. This doesn't make it any more likely to do so.
209.
Rachel Sutcliffe
November 14, 2008
I am a student and access to holdings is pivotal to my scholarly research. With the demise of NUTMUC and its integration with WorldCat, and the huge number of catalogs across the world that pool their catalog holdings in worldcat should not be restricted. Remember that worldcat's humble beginnings started with the collaborative work of the world's libraries, don't shut them out!
208.
Anton Green
November 14, 2008
HEy, I like free access to all kinds of stuff. Damn the man, Save the Empire!
207.
melodie frances
November 14, 2008
206.
john ramsey
November 14, 2008
typical greedy crap. i hope enough librarians out there are made aware of this, understand the ramifications of continuing to feed this beast and will do what they can to tell OLCL to bump off.
205.
Heather Hernandez
November 14, 2008
204.
Joyce Latham
November 14, 2008
Their era is over, and they are trying not to admit it.
203.
Benjamin Ratzlaff
November 14, 2008
202.
Phil Smith
November 14, 2008
This seems to me to be a protectionist policy that will surely detract from the good works that OCLC is capable of. Apart from the legality of applying your own seal of ownership via the 996 tag to works created and loaned to you by others, I believe you would be better served by stepping back and approaching the industry and your customers with a true value offering that respects choice rather than control. This policy and it's predecessor for that matter, demonstrate the need for all of us that are passionate about libraries to ensure unfettered and open access to prevent this type of thing. I would advocate that while OCLC can play an excellent role in delivering services to their customers, those customers should not (and indeed, I suspect their respective financial supporters would not allow them to) accept a contract or agreement that not only charges them a fee for service, but also signs over the rights to control the records they've created and therefore limits their rights or the downstream rights of their users to their data.
201.
Angela Gurney
November 14, 2008
200.
David E Bell
November 14, 2008
Public access to information is the platform on which democracy, as we know it and as we dream of it, rests on. Driving the price of this vital service up is just as corrosive as a poll tax.
199.
Dan Wells
November 14, 2008
As an homage to Homer Simpson, I have recently concluded there are three ways to do things: the right way, the wrong way, and the OCLC way (which is the wrong way, but slower).
198.
Mary Murrell
November 14, 2008
197.
Christopher Holland
November 14, 2008
196.
Joshua Bakersfield
November 14, 2008
195.
Jessie Powell
November 14, 2008
194.
Andrew Kowles
November 14, 2008
Enough with corporate information fencing! Go find another way screw the general public.
193.
Dana Bjorklund
November 14, 2008
192.
Anthony Prince
November 14, 2008
191.
Joshua Gomez
November 14, 2008
190.
François Granger
November 14, 2008
189.
Pete Tiarks
November 14, 2008
As a student, i make use of versatile bibliographic services like Zotero, and am concerned about the way in which closed data licenses may affect their ability to continuing developing technologies that make my life easier and my work more effective. As a library user, I'd like to see more competition amongst services to make the experience of finding a book as painless as possible. As a book lover, I worry that reading is done little enough nowadays without erecting any new barriers to people finding the books they want.
188.
Gary Parlee
November 14, 2008
187.
Nick Harvey
November 14, 2008
186.
Jordan Frith
November 14, 2008
185.
Susan Fleming
November 14, 2008
While I do not personally use the WorldCat records I do firmly believe that they should remain in the public domain because, as stated "they are the collected work product of thousands of libraries" and therefore do not belong to any one orgainziation.
184.
Kjerste Christensen
November 14, 2008
I am a cataloger at a publicly-funded university who spends much of her time contributing original records to WorldCat. I'm also an active LibraryThing member who makes use of records created by other catalogers, many of them also working at publicly-funded institutions.
183.
Claire Rivers
November 14, 2008
182.
Helen Taylor
November 14, 2008
This will ultimately interfere with with the open and free access to information that libraries strive for.
181.
Anders Ringnér
November 14, 2008
180.
Julie Hankinson
November 14, 2008
179.
James Tucker
November 14, 2008
178.
Mike Bannister
November 14, 2008
177.
Deepti Chittamuru
November 14, 2008
176.
Sonya Green
November 14, 2008
The good of the library world shouldn't be restricted. Now that we not only have the technology but also the social community to have an open, sharable database of records, there's no reason to have to pay exorbitantly for what should be free.
175.
laurie allen
November 14, 2008
174.
Travis DePuy
November 14, 2008
173.
Timothy Spalding
November 14, 2008
The change is likely to affect LibraryThing, the personal cataloging website I founded, so my motives may be suspect. But ultimately, they should not be. Library innovation has never been, never will and indeed should not be a purely non-profit endeavor. Sharing information with the public—even greedy companies that help regular people catalog their home libraries—is part of libraries' core mission.
172.
Anya Kartavenko
November 14, 2008
171.
Brian Carver
November 14, 2008
170.
Michael Lissner
November 14, 2008
169.
Cornelia Penner
November 14, 2008
168.
David Burke
November 14, 2008
167.
Katie Page
November 14, 2008
166.
M. Decker
November 14, 2008
I am a reference librarian and many times I need access to WorldCat records. If restrictions are placed on my being unable to access these records, then I cannot do my job effectively and that is unfair to my patrons.
165.
David McCormick
November 14, 2008
These records are not the intellectual property of OCLC.
164.
Sheila Torres-Blank
November 14, 2008
163.
Jason Griffey
November 14, 2008
As an academic librarian who has been at the forefront of Open Access and the desire to increase, not decrease, the availability of information in the world, this policy is not only unacceptable, it is criminal. It has the stink of a mugging on it...the power play is blatant and libraries must fight this.
162.
Jonathan Henke
November 14, 2008
161.
Lennon Day-Reynolds
November 14, 2008
I have worked in IT in the academic field for a number of years, and OCLC's increasing consolidation of power in the market hurts all of us: it impedes innovation, increases costs, and forces every institution to accept the same vertical stack of tools, or risk the wrath of their primary shared-catalog vendor. This kind of blatant power-grab is a typical response of a despot who feels their power slipping.
160.
Aleene Howser
November 14, 2008
159.
Keith Olsen
November 14, 2008
As a researcher at Oregon State University, I believe information about our collective works should be owned by the public. Access to the information should be free and accessible to all. If OCLC is not on board with this, let's find another organization that is.
158.
Elaine Sanchez
November 14, 2008
I am Head of Cataloging & Metadata Services at a public institution of higher education. By signing this petition, however, I represent only my own opinions. I support this petition, and I demand that OCLC work as a non-profit, member-driven organization, seeking and abiding by the will of its members, in order to support open access to our member-input cataloging records.
157.
Michael Williams
November 14, 2008
156.
Amanda Kaiser
November 14, 2008
155.
Heidi Hansen
November 14, 2008
I really had a lot of respect for OCLC until I heard about this... I really think they have some innovative ideas, but the policy changes are moving 5 steps backwards.
154.
Jessica Speer
November 14, 2008
153.
Amy Babb
November 14, 2008
When the world becomes monopolized at any level it effects us all. To have choices and to have access to free information is crucial especially to non-profits and small businesses. Please chose the betterment for all rather than power and control. Thank you, Amy Babb
152.
Anne Eckhart
November 14, 2008
151.
Ron Grados
November 14, 2008
150.
Ryan Shaw
November 14, 2008
At a time when openly available data sets are enabling a number of new avenues of research and empowering researchers outside of traditional centers of power, this is an extremely shortsighted tactic by OCLC. As a Ph.D. student who relies on such open data sets, I am strongly opposed to OCLC's claims on a data set produced through the collective labor of librarians around the world.
149.
Martin Fashbaugh
November 14, 2008
148.
Dallas Lynn
November 14, 2008
Libraries are a valuable public resource that you are actively harming with this policy.
147.
Laura Perleberg
November 14, 2008
I'm a cataloging librarian and we already pay OCLC exorbitant fees for everything. Currently, we don't use OCLC to catalog, but they're trying to make sure we have to!
146.
Greg Albers
November 14, 2008
145.
Kate Sherrill
November 14, 2008
144.
Aaron Stark
November 14, 2008
143.
Lisa Martincik
November 14, 2008
I do not currently work with cataloging records, but this unprecedented restriction of contributed records has the potential to impact accessibility all along the chain, from librarians to users.
142.
Adrian McEwen
November 14, 2008
141.
Andrew Civettini
November 14, 2008
140.
Tina Fetner
November 14, 2008
This is incredibly frustrating for smaller institutions, who rely on WorldCat to be the last word on library records.
139.
Dan Connolly
November 14, 2008
138.
Joel Cooper
November 14, 2008
OCLC has become the de facto authority for bibliographic records because of the contributions of many participating libraries. They have borrowed this authority, it cannot be seized by force.
137.
Bob Reinhardt
November 14, 2008
136.
Matt Bailey
November 14, 2008
135.
Patrick Schmitz
November 14, 2008
This completely undermines the notion of public service and the open sense of a library. It completely changes my image of OCLC (for the negative), and will change my position on OCLC matters in my work in higher education.
134.
Kanya Lyons
November 14, 2008
133.
Ryan Phillips
November 14, 2008
132.
Marc C. Santos
November 14, 2008
As a professor of classical rhetoric and new media production, I stress to my peers and students the important of open source projects. The progression of our society depends upon the free, uninhibited flow of information; digital technologies magic stems from their ability to foster cooperation. We cannot allow any group to attempt to usurp and monopolize information. Centralizing control of library catalogues is itself a bad idea; to attempt to capitalize on such control treads on the criminal.
131.
Michael Moriconi
November 14, 2008
130.
Tim Rohrer
November 14, 2008
129.
Mark Casazza
November 14, 2008
Library records are facts and as facts they should be available to anyone who wants to use them. And, I don't want my (or my children's and grandchildren's) ability to use basic facts restricted because one company got greedy now.
128.
Mark Dingemanse
November 14, 2008
Let public knowledge remain public.
127.
Michael Rappazzo
November 14, 2008
126.
Matthew Simmons
November 14, 2008
While librarians must walk a fine line between protecting intellectual property and providing access to knowledge, OCLC's initiative is surely recognizable as unnecessary for protecting intellectual property while limiting access to scholarship.
125.
Matthew Lister
November 14, 2008
124.
Rachel Jordan
November 14, 2008
123.
Mary W Glenn
November 14, 2008
122.
Chris Simmons
November 14, 2008
121.
Steffan Swaan
November 14, 2008
120.
Olivier Garcia
November 14, 2008
119.
Holly Sinco
November 14, 2008
118.
Lori Boess
November 14, 2008
117.
Joseph Hall
November 14, 2008
route around!
116.
Minh Lai
November 14, 2008
I use Opensource tools that links to OCLC for bio records for my research and not being able to do that will hinder my research greatly.
115.
Nabonita Guha
November 14, 2008
The way OCLC making misuse of its powers is really unacceptable. It's a very wrong approach of growing that may leading it to loose its credibility in the library community.
114.
Holly Wilson
November 14, 2008
113.
surajit sarkar
November 14, 2008
I do protest against OCLC's activity..
112.
Madeleine Moore
November 14, 2008
111.
Janette McLeod
November 14, 2008
110.
Renu Seth
November 14, 2008
109.
Andrew Ash
November 14, 2008
108.
Tobias Wildi
November 14, 2008
107.
Brian Jennings
November 14, 2008
106.
John Salvatier
November 14, 2008
105.
Duncan Mortimer
November 14, 2008
Honestly, I'm not certain how this would affect me. However, I am certain that I oppose it --- monopoly is never a good thing, and in this case, I think a particularly bad thing. The internet promises enormous benefits for society, in a large part because of the ease of access to information, and the innovation and knowledge sharing this fosters. This proposal by OCLC is definitely a step in the wrong direction.
104.
Gill Abarbanel
November 14, 2008
As a reader and academic, it surly affects me! The idea of free information must be saved.
103.
Edward Madson
November 14, 2008
102.
Patrick Burke
November 14, 2008
101.
Thom Evans
November 14, 2008
100.
Jason Bylinowski
November 14, 2008
Way to go, jerks.
99.
Margaret Kipp
November 14, 2008
98.
Monty Zukowski
November 14, 2008
Our local libraries were closed for months last year because of lack of funding combined with ridiculous operating costs. Monopolizing library records is just plain wrong, as are policies that basically force libraries to hand money over to OCLC.
97.
Alper Mat
November 14, 2008
96.
James Hall
November 14, 2008
regular user of open library which OCLC is trying to shut down
95.
Lutz Krebs
November 14, 2008
It is saddening to see how you try to monopolize catalog information accumulated by libraries around the world. Afraid you cannot compete against some of the creative and innovative uses that others are proposing for this data?
94.
Robert Godwin
November 14, 2008
93.
Noah Tye
November 14, 2008
92.
Benjamin Alpers
November 14, 2008
91.
Nils Guillermin
November 14, 2008
This affects me because I go to a library at least once a week. However, even if I only went once a year, the fact that some company would believe itself righteous in owning the books I now read for free as product for them to own and do whatever they want with, sickens me. I want my books, and I want everyone else to have their books. Surely anyone who writes literature does not do so in order to enrichen petty corporations, and this kind of radical power is not conducive to literature or writing or writers or anything connected to the growth and spread of knowledge through written word.
90.
Katherine McNamara
November 14, 2008
These records, indeed, are not yours; they belong to the world. You have used the desire for economic gain to restrict the ancient, free circulation of knowledge. This is wrong, and I believe you will be so judged, not least by society and history.
89.
Stephen Balbach
November 14, 2008
As a regular user of Wikipedia, LibraryThing, OpenLibrary and other future online services it is imperative that there be an open access database. If OCLC is unable to adapt to the Internet paradigm of open access it will become irrelevant within a generation or less.
88.
Lawrence White
November 14, 2008
I am deeply offended by the attempt of private parties to control public knowledge.
87.
Andrew Wackerfuss
November 14, 2008
86.
Jenny Emanuel
November 14, 2008
85.
Caleb Crain
November 14, 2008
84.
Siva Vaidhyanathan
November 14, 2008
83.
Ryan Webster
November 14, 2008
I am public librarian. I think that many library staff members everywhere will either not know about this policy or not understand it and will break it unknowingly. It seems like the legal issues could get very messy unnecessarily.
82.
Jeffrey Burdges
November 14, 2008
81.
Anand Mani
November 14, 2008
80.
Kelvin Pittman
November 14, 2008
How will gifted autodidacts of the next millennium be able to do any substantive research without free access to WorldCat?
79.
Zak Yeidel
November 14, 2008
78.
Eric Husman
November 14, 2008
I use Zotero and Wiki for research and have found them to be extremely helpful in organizing bibliographies. If OCLC's actions are in fact threatening these Open Source projects, it will severely hamper people like me who don't have easy access to University libraries.
77.
Jonathan Eddy
November 14, 2008
Doing research for argumentative papers is made much easier with these records online and publically accessible. Without these library records, finding proper works is nearly impossible.
76.
Bob Dylan
November 14, 2008
Seems bad.
75.
Ellen Smith
November 14, 2008
74.
Cody Hennesy
November 14, 2008
73.
John Deamer
November 14, 2008
72.
Craig Haggit
November 14, 2008
For OCLC to take something not created by them, and then shamelessly try to take ownership of it is personally insulting. That's how it affects me. I would go further and say those records should be public domain.
71.
Elizabeth Hanes Perry
November 14, 2008
In the 1970s, I helped type in my library's physical records to OCLC. Taxpayer money was spent to enter these records. I do not see why records created at taxpayer expense should retroactively be converted into records unavailable to other public institutions except for pay.
70.
Mark Gardiner
November 14, 2008
69.
Pamela Gadsden
November 14, 2008
I'm an ordinary citizen who objects to being scammed.
68.
Brendan Coffey
November 14, 2008
67.
Winfield Hill
November 13, 2008
66.
Francesca Elston
November 13, 2008
Freedom of information affects everyone! Libraries should have unrestricted access to this information.
65.
Nicholas Bennyhoff
November 13, 2008
64.
Paul Litvak
November 13, 2008
As a researcher, it is vital to me that information be as freely available as possible.
63.
Kevin Becker
November 13, 2008
At a time when I'm introducing open source software into my library, OCLC seems more and more like the Microsoft of the library world... Where is our firefox?
62.
Peter Tagtmeyer
November 13, 2008
61.
David Whelchel
November 13, 2008
60.
Henry Farrell
November 13, 2008
Because it helps undermine the shared base of knowledge that enables scholarship.
59.
Anthony Young
November 13, 2008
58.
Chris Thiessen
November 13, 2008
I'm a developer working on ways to make book information more accessible. This is crazy talk, and only closes doors to improvement.
57.
Edward Dorrington
November 13, 2008
56.
Glen Morris
November 13, 2008
Once again, some group motivated by greed tries to profit from the work of others while freezing them out of the profits. Jail is too good for those behind the OCLC power grab.
55.
Doug Salomon
November 13, 2008
54.
Michael Burgess
November 13, 2008
I am a library patron, and web user, I use the web to assist me in my search for books to read. book indexes should be freely accessible to all.
53.
Casey Durfee
November 13, 2008
52.
Tobin Sharp
November 13, 2008
51.
Noel Diaz
November 13, 2008
50.
Kris Brix
November 13, 2008
when working at UCLA library I would always hear from my section head how worried they were about being able to afford to keep using OCLC and we were always told not to keep the program open and find ways to get information other ways since we were being charged per each command. This is a world class university/ library and they have to worry about how expensive accurate catalog information is???
49.
Greg McMullen
November 13, 2008
48.
David Sandey
November 13, 2008
47.
Richard Blumberg
November 13, 2008
This sort of grab for power hinders the productivity of our nation and inhibits liberty, for it sets a price tag on the accumulated wealth of knowledge that humankind has produced. Bad stuff. Richard Blumberg
46.
Jeff Lord
November 13, 2008
45.
Rebecca Malamud
November 13, 2008
44.
Dorothea Salo
November 13, 2008
OCLC needs to share instead of land-grab. This is a disservice to the world of libraries and to the profession of librarianship.
43.
Ben Brinkley
November 13, 2008
42.
Hilary Mason
November 13, 2008
41.
Bruce D'Arcus
November 13, 2008
I'm a teacher and scholar who relies on openly available information. Policies such as these are antithetical to that spirit, and so counterproductive.
40.
Chris Hunter
November 13, 2008
39.
Benjamin Hill
November 13, 2008
38.
Suzanne Hoey
November 13, 2008
37.
Joshua Paine
November 13, 2008
Most libraries in the U.S. are publicly funded--for the public good. They shouldn't even have the authority to assign copyright of their catalogs to a private entity, and no private entity should be allowed to lock up what my tax dollars have paid for.
36.
Jaime Vargas
November 13, 2008
As a researcher and library goer I don't want catalog information to be closed and controlled by a minority group. This kind of information must be free specially when a our libraries are supported with public funds and hence OCLC.
35.
Stephen Francoeur
November 13, 2008
These policies pointlessly constrains innovation.
34.
Patrick Taylor
November 13, 2008
I believe that that this OCLC policy will stand in the way of integrating libraries into the future of information sharing--which is important to me as an academic, programmer, and lover of books.
33.
Richard Rothwell
November 13, 2008
I use warious online database to catalogue my own library - this data should clearly be freely available to all.
32.
Ed Snible
November 13, 2008
This will end LibraryThing, which I use, and also hurt my ability to research antiquarian books.
31.
ian vandeventer
November 13, 2008
30.
Kendall Clark
November 13, 2008
I have a large personal library (5000+ volumes) and rely on catalog information to organize it, as well as being an avid library user my entire life. OCLC should *stop* this nonsense immediately.
29.
Janet Martini
November 13, 2008
I am not quite sure what this means but it doesn't sound good. I work for a cataloging software company and we get OCLC records for a few Libraries. If OCLC has the copyright to the records will the Library be able to send them to another company for production of a catalog?
28.
David Hjelle
November 13, 2008
As a student, I often seek information from a variety of sources. Easy access to library information is critical. While I respect your right to make a viable business out of this information, taking copyright from the original owners of library records (who might otherwise disseminate the information freely) is silly at best and unethical at worst. I am sure that you can find better ways to compete. Thank you.
27.
Zellyn Hunter
November 13, 2008
I want open access to records that were created by public funds.
26.
Jonathan Sackett
November 13, 2008
I work in the educational field, particularly focused on reading. As such I work with a lot of libraries. I have never, ever seen monopolistic control over library information work to the benefit of the library or its patrons. Something like this is atrocious and should be stopped.
25.
Gordon Fischer
November 13, 2008
The inscription above the Boston Public Library sums it up : "Free To All".
24.
chris fitzgerald
November 13, 2008
This is outrageous. Stop this nonsense.
23.
Luís Guilherme Fernandes Pereira
November 13, 2008
22.
Adam M.
November 13, 2008
21.
Chris Michel
November 13, 2008
Keep information free.
20.
Peter Hardie
November 13, 2008
It is untenable that mere catalog data be copyrighted
19.
reagan Gibbs
November 13, 2008
information must be free, it will be free--one way or another... do not criminalize our curiosity or our ingenuity or our playfulness. This is, through design or unintended consequence, an economic attack on libraries everywhere.
18.
mark ellul
November 13, 2008
17.
Peter Collopy
November 13, 2008
16.
Michael Wexler
November 13, 2008
Libraries exist to foster access to information. If you work with a library, you should be working to help them with that goal. Creating a world where libraries go broke trying to work with each other destroys it.
15.
Tim Trefren
November 13, 2008
14.
Daniel Cussen
November 13, 2008
I'm not fond of monopolies, and this looks like a blatant case of IP abuse to enforce one.
13.
Arun Ghosh
November 13, 2008
Do the right thing OCLC, don't aspire to be worse than the RIAA.
12.
Andreas Lloyd
November 13, 2008
I believe that knowledge needs to be shared. The whole point of libraries is to share knowledge. WorldCat is moving in the wrong direction, away from the stated goals of the libraries.
11.
Stuart Myles
November 13, 2008
Books and the libraries that house them are a key resource for the intellectual development and cultural flowering of any nation. As America faces a grim immediate future, it is even more important for information which belongs to the publicly-funded libraries of the nation to remain the property of the taxpayers. Don't privatize the library catalogues!
10.
S Sloyan
November 13, 2008
9.
ben olsen
November 13, 2008
8.
Erik Speckman
November 13, 2008
7.
Robert Joyce
November 13, 2008
Libraries are supposed to be open places. We don't need any new tragedies of the Commons! We ourselves PAY for these libraries. Why should we give what we pay for to grifters? Just so some useless "catalog" can be created? NO WAY!
6.
Anand Chitipothu
November 13, 2008
5.
Karl D'Adamo
November 13, 2008
4.
Carl Johnson
November 13, 2008
Information wants to be free. Do the right thing and help people, not screw them over.
3.
Jeff McCrory
November 13, 2008
2.
Ian Elwood
November 13, 2008
Being limited in the usage of library records would have a negative impact on my research, making studying and learning more difficult instead of less.
1.
Aaron Swartz
November 13, 2008
Sign this petition
index