The Internet and the Library
"In this digital age, the custodians of published works are
at the center of a global copyright controversy that casts
them as villains simply for doing their job: letting people
borrow books for free."
It is amazing that the traditional archivists of human knowledge
- the libraries - failed so spectacularly to ride the tiger
of the Internet, that epitome and apex of knowledge creation
and distribution. At first, libraries, the inertial repositories
of printed matter, were overwhelmed by the rapid pace of technology
and by the ephemeral and anarchic content it spawned. They
were reduced to providing access to dull card catalogues and
unimaginative collections of web links. The more daring added
online exhibits and digitized collections. A typical library
web site is still comprised of static representations of the
library's physical assets and a few quasi-interactive services.
This tendency - by both publishers and libraries - to inadequately
and inappropriately pour old wine into new vessels is what
caused the recent furor over e-books.
The lending of e-books to patrons appears to be a natural
extension of the classical role of libraries: physical book
lending. Libraries sought also to extend their archival functions
to e-books. But librarians failed to grasp the essential and
substantive differences between the two formats. E-books can
be easily, stealthily, and cheaply copied, for instance. Copyright
violations are a real and present danger with e-books. Moreover,
e-books are not a tangible product. "Lending" an e-book -
is tantamount to copying an e-book. In other words, e-books
are not books at all. They are software products. Libraries
have pioneered digital collections (as they have other information
technologies throughout history) and are still the main promoters
of e-publishing. But now they are at risk of becoming piracy
portals.
Solutions are, appropriately, being borrowed from the software
industry. Net Library has lately granted multiple user license
to a university library system. Such licence allows for unlimited
access and are priced according to the number of the library's
patrons, or the number of its reading devices and terminals.
Another possibility is to implement the shareware model -
a trial period followed by a purchase option or an expiration,
a-la Rosetta's expiring e-book.
Distributor Baker & Taylor have unveiled at the recent ALA
a prototype e-book distribution system jointly developed by
ibooks and Digital Owl. It will be sold to libraries by B&T's
Information division and Reciprocal.
The annual subscription for use of the digital library comprises
"a catalog of digital content, brandable pages and web based
tools for each participating library to customize for their
patrons. Patrons of participating libraries will then be able
to browse digital content online, or download and check out
the content they are most interested in. Content may be checked
out for an extended period of time set by each library, including
checking out eBooks from home." Still, it seems that B&T's
approach is heavily influenced by software licensing ("one
copy one use").
But, there is an underlying, fundamental incompatibility between
the Internet and the library. They are competitors. One vitiates
the other. Free Internet access and e-book reading devices
in libraries notwithstanding - the Internet, unless harnessed
and integrated by libraries, threatens their very existence
by depriving them of patrons. Libraries, in turn, threaten
the budding software industry we, misleadingly, call "e-publishing".
There are major operational and philosophical differences
between physical and virtual libraries. The former are based
on the tried and proven technology of print. The latter on
the chaos we know as cyberspace and on user-averse technologies
developed by geeks and nerds, rather than by marketers, users,
and librarians.
Physical libraries enjoy great advantages, not the least being
their habit-forming head start (2,500 years of first mover
advantage). Libraries are hubs of social interaction and entertainment
(the way cinemas used to be). Libraries have catered to users'
reference needs in reference centers for centuries (and, lately,
through Selective Dissemination of Information, or SDI). The
war is by no means decided. "Progress" may yet consist of
the assimilation of hi-tech gadgets by lo-tech libraries.
It may turn out to be convergence at its best, as librarians
become computer savvy - and computer types create knowledge
and disseminate it. |