Page:Open access and the humanities - contexts, controversies and the future.pdf/186



A reminder that I here use the invariant US spelling of ‘license’ throughout.

United States of America, ‘U.S. Constitution: Article 1 Section 8’, The U.S. Constitution Online, 2010 www.usconstitution.net/xconst_A1Sec8.html?ModPagespeed=noscript [accessed 21 February 2014].

Charles W. Bailey Jr, ‘Strong Copyright + DRM + Weak Net Neutrality = Digital Dystopia?’, Information Technology and Libraries, 25 (2013), 116–27, 139 (p. 117) http://dx.doi.org/10.6017/ital.v25i3.3344.

Intellectual Property Ofﬁce of the United Kingdom, ‘Copyright: Essential Reading’, 2011, p. 2 https://ipo.gov.uk/c-essential.pdf [accessed 21 February 2014].

Bailey Jr, ‘Strong Copyright + DRM + Weak Net Neutrality = Digital Dystopia?’, p. 17.

See Lee Edwards and others, ‘“Isn’t It Just a Way to Protect Walt Disney’s Rights?”: Media User Perspectives on Copyright’, New Media & Society, 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444813511402.

See, for instance, Palgrave Macmillan Journals, ‘Copyright FAQs’, 2014 www.palgrave-journals.com/pal/authors/copyright_faqs.html [accessed 22 February 2014].

Creative Commons, ‘Case Law’, 2013 http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Case_Law [accessed 6 March 2014].

Ellen Collins, Caren Milloy and Graham Stone, Guide to Creative Commons for Humanities and Social Science Monograph Authors, ed. James Baker, Martin Paul Eve and Ernesto Priego (London: Jisc Collections, 2013) http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/17828 [accessed 23 February 2014].

Creative Commons, ‘About the Licenses’, 2014 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ [accessed 23 February 2014].

Creative Commons, ‘About the Licenses’.

Collins, Milloy and Stone, Guide to Creative Commons. Licensed under a CC BY license. I have removed legal and license code links and removed some portions of description text, including reference to CC0.

Collins, Milloy and Stone, Guide to Creative Commons, p. 10.

Richard Stallman, ‘Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software’, in Free Software, Free Society: Selected Essays of Richard Stallman (Boston, MA: Free Software Foundation, 2010), pp. 83–8.

Paul Duguid, ‘Material Matters: The Past and Futorology of the Book’, in The Future of the Book, ed. Geoffrey Nunberg (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), pp. 63–101 (p. 74).

The Ad Hoc Committee on Fair Use and Academic Freedom, Clipping Our Own Wings: Copyright and Creativity in Communication Research (The Media and Communication Policy Task Force, 7 May 2010) www.cmsimpact.org/fair-use/related-materials/documents/clipping-our-own-