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Date: | Mon, 4 Aug 2014 14:20:35 +1000 |
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Pamela
It will depend on the agreement signed with the journal.
These questions should all be very clear in any author agreement.
If not, you just ask the journal and explain your motivation and planned
use.
For 16 years, I published a peer-reviewed journal and we regularly updated
our agreements to keep up with changes in the electronic world, including
universities wanting to archive staff publications online and employers
owning the copyright etc..
This might be a useful link from Wiley
http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/faqs_copyright.asp
Jan Cornfoot
Date: Sun, 3 Aug 2014 08:20:27 +0100
From: Pamela Morrison <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Copyright
Dear all
Calling the legal beagles on Lactnet. If you write an article and
it's published in a journal, which is not open-access, who are you
allowed to share it with? Presumably the journal owns the copyright,
but who owns the intellectual property? For instance I'm assuming
it's OK to share single copies with colleagues for educational
purposes. And if one were to use it as a handout at a conference
presentation, would that be OK too? What about putting a copy up on
your own or someone else's website so that the people who really need
the information, but didn't have subscriptions to the journal in
question, could have access to it - could that be counted as education too?
Thanks if you can help.
Pamela Morrison IBCLC
Rustington, England
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