Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

BU to Create Free Archive of Faculty Research

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Excellent and unexpected news today! BU will have a Free (non-commercial) archive of all of their scholarly research, old and new.

 This BU today article by Art Jahnke and Jessica Ullian broke the story about what happened:

Boston University took a giant step towards greater access to academic scholarship and research on February 11, when the University Council voted to support an open access system that would make scholarly work of the faculty and staff available online to anyone, for free, as long as the authors are credited and the scholarship is not used for profit.

“We believe this is the first time that a university as a whole has taken a stand on behalf of the university as opposed to a single school or college,” says Wendy Mariner, the chair of the Faculty Council and a professor at the School of Law, at the School of Public Health, and at the School of Medicine. “We are looking forward to new forms of publication in the 21st century that will transform the ways that knowledge and information are shared.”

“The resolution passed by our University Council is a very important statement on the importance of open access to the results of scholarship and research created within the University,” says BU President Robert A. Brown. “The digital archive called for in the resolution will become a great repository for the creativity of our faculty and students.”

The council vote has approved an initiative to establish an archive of the research and scholarship produced by the faculty of the University. Mariner says that one goal is to make it easier for faculty to be able to share their own research with students. and colleagues.

The increased ownership and control is good news for researchers such as Barbara Millen, a professor and chair of the graduate nutrition program at the School of Medicine. Working on a book about nutrition research at one point in her career, Millen found herself in the paradoxical position of having to seek permission to use her own data after it was published in a journal that retained the copyright to her work. The challenge, says Millen, who cochaired the University Council committee that recommended the open access initiative, will be providing faculty with the tools to make their research available online.

“Open access will really highlight the tremendous productivity of our faculty,” says Millen. “Among the more important things needed to make it work is a collaboration between the libraries and our faculty to get their research onto the Web. It’s not an inconsequential task.”

Traditionally, academic journal publishers have used subscriptions to cover the costs of printing, marketing, and distribution. Many also charge a per-page fee to researchers whose work they publish, which can add up to thousands of dollars. The journals control access to the published papers, because they often hold exclusive copyright. Thanks to the Internet, printing presses and expensive distribution networks are no longer needed, but there are still costs for editing, marketing, and other logistics, even for online journals, and open-access journals typically charge scholars a flat processing fee to cover these costs. For example, BioMed Central, the for-profit publisher of Environmental Health, charges authors $1,700.

Some universities, such as the University of California, are footing the bill for their faculty’s open-access publishing fees, and in other cases, researchers have included these fees as a line item in their grant applications. At least one major source of grants, the National Institutes of Health, recently mandated that any research it funds must be open-access within a year after publication.

Last year, according to an editorial in Environmental Health, only about 10 percent of published scientific articles were accessible without restrictions. But a 2006 survey by the Washington, D.C.–based Association of Research Libraries found that 43 percent of its member universities and research institutions already had open-access archives and 35 percent were planning one. “Open access is an irresistible tide,” says David Ozonoff, a professor of environmental health at SPH and an editor-in-chief of Environmental Health. “The publishers see this. They’ve been trying to prevent it, but it’s impossible.”

News of the University Council vote was welcomed by Robert Hudson, the director of Mugar Memorial Library, and as cochair of the University Council committee on scholarly activities and libraries, a key force behind the move toward open access. Hudson says the effort to maintain an up-to-date collection of scholarly journals costs the University approximately $8 million a year. Annual subscription rates can reach $20,000 and tend to increase 6 to 10 percent each year; as a result, expanding the library’s scholarly archive has been a financial challenge.

“This vote sends a very strong message of support for open and free exchange of scholarly work,” says Hudson. “Open access means that the results of research and scholarship can be made open and freely accessible to anyone. It really has increased the potential to showcase the research and scholarship of the University in ways that have
not been evident to people.””

BUFC wasn’t actively pushing this (rather, we are pushing for OpenCourseWare), but this is still a huge, huge victory on the path to a free culture. I can’t wait to see this implemented!

Rich

Report from FC2008, BUOCW!

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

I’ve started a Google Group for those who want to be part of the OpenCourseWare project development. Please join if you want to help out or see what we’re up to!

Also: I wrote up a summary of the events at FC2008 for those who weren’t able to attend.

Exitement ahead, my friends.

Going to Free Culture Conference 2008!

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

fc_title_trans.png

We’re going to Free Culture 2008 in Berkeley, California on Friday! I’m excited to meet all of the free culture people and see all of the speakers. Hopefully I’ll be giving a talk/workshop thing on the second day, not quite sure how they’re going to set it up, though, so we’ll see how that goes..

Anyway, if you’re going to be there you should come and see me! I’d love to talk to you about OpenCourseWare or applied cryptography or anything else.

I’ll be sure to put up some pictures of all the FC kiddies getting hyphy up in the Yay Area, of course.

See you there!
Rich

Free Culture TV / Students for Free Culture Conference in CA

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

You may never have heard of Miro, but it’s one of the most exciting projects going on right now.

Miro is a bit like if iTunes and an HDTiVo lived in your computer. You can watch any shows anytime, make your own TV channels, save stuff from YouTube and automatically download Torrents of your favorite shows right as they come out. It is Free and Open Source software created by a wonderful group called the Participatory Culture Foundation.

Anyway, Parker Higgins from NYU Free Culture interned there this summer and has made two new Miro channels, Free Culture TV and Yes! We’re Open!. FCTV is all Free Culture related stuff and Yes! is a channel which only shows freely licensed movies and shows which can be freely remixed and redistributed. Cool stuff.

ALSO!

Students for Free Culture Conference 2008

October 11 and 12
Berkeley, CA

That’s all I know about it right now. But I’m going to try my damnest to get out there and you should too!

Finally, big-ups to Harvard Free Culture for there presentation of YouTomb project at the Last HOPE conference in NYC recently. I was there presenting Anomos and it was nice to see some other Free Culture kids there.

Rich

Swag! Swag! Swag!

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

The mothership sent me a box of Free Culture stuff..there’s stickers and mixCDs and T-shirts and decoder rings and distros and buttons and flyers and stuff..

Who wants some stuff?

freecultureswag.jpg

R

Pandora.com Founder Tim Westergren coming to speak at BU!

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Tim Westergren, founder of Pandora.com, which provides custom radio stations based on user preferences is coming to speak on 2/27 at Morse Auditorium! Here’s the info from the facebook invite:

pandora.jpg

Name:
Pandora.com Founder Tim Westergren Talks about Digital Music
Tagline:
Radio, Access, Industry, Internet and Music!
Host:
BU Free Culture
Type:
Date:
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Time:
7:00pm - 9:00pm
Location:
Morse Auditorium
Street:
Commonwealth Ave
City/Town:
Boston, MA
Email:

Description

Pandora.com provides a custom radio station to listeners based on their personal tastes in music.

The site’s founder, Tim Westergren, is coming to talk about the service and the future of digital music and the record industry.

This is his bio from the site:
Tim Westergren
Chief Strategy Officer & Founder
Tim Westergren founded Pandora in January 2000 and now serves as its Chief Strategy Officer. Tim is an award-winning composer, an accomplished musician and a record producer with 20 years of experience in the music industry. He has recorded with independent labels, managed artists, owned a commercial digital recording studio, scored feature films, produced albums, and performed extensively. His main instrument is the piano, but over the years he has played the bassoon, drums and clarinet and his musical background spans such genres as rock, blues, jazz and classical music.

Tim received his B.A. from Stanford University, where he studied computer acoustics and recording technology. A musician’s musician, he is obsessed with helping talented emerging artists connect with the music fans most likely to appreciate their music. In addition to guiding Pandora’s overall strategy and vision, Tim now spends most of his time as Pandora’s chief evangelist - traveling the country to meet with listeners to collect feedback, research local music, and spread the word of the Music Genome Project.

The event is cohosted by the BU ACLU and BU Free Culture and is open to all!

http://bu.facebook.com/event.php?eid=10954144253
Come one, come all!

College Net. Filtering Bill Clears House, Freep Coverage

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Little bit of Free Culture coverage in the Daily Free Press again!

Other students are more concerned about the violation of privacy that might occur with network monitoring.

“This would be a violation of privacy and a waste of funds that could be used for education,” said Rich Jones, founder of BU’s Free Culture Club and a College of Arts and Sciences sophomore. “[The entertainment lobby] is diverting funds from education to defend their broken business model.”

Justin Kaufman, a member of the Student Union technology committee, said he thinks that such monitoring could engender negative feelings among campus network users.

“It changes . . . mentality when you’re being watched actively and monitored,” Kaufman, a CAS junior, said.

http://media.www.dailyfreepress.com/media/storage/paper87/news/2008/02/01/News/New-Technology.Bill.Could.Force.Bu.Admin.To.Monitor.Transfers-3183281.shtml

I don’t know what the Student Union technology committee does but I think we should be talking to them about issues. I had classes with Justin and he’s a friendly guy so maybe we will have some more allies at the school!

We may be having a speaker at the end of the month, so keep your eyes posted for that!

Rich

Note about the Mailing List, NIH Research

Friday, December 28th, 2007

Whoops. So the FreeList wasn’t making it past BU’s spam filter, so I’ve set a new internal list. To send messages to it, send an email to bufc-list@bu.edu

Thanks!

And while I’m here, I’m going to mention that All NIH funded research is now going to be made publicly available through PubMed within a year. I do a lot of research and wikipedia editing with pubmed, so this is pretty huge news for me and anybody else who likes science.

Richout.

Daily Free Press Article

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Hey, the Freep wrote a thing about us! Neat. I know I trash them a lot for being made fun of by the Onion, but they’re quite a bit better this year.

New group aims to put BU lectures online for public

Andy Facini

Issue date: 12/7/07
  • Page 1 of 1

A Boston University group is pushing for the school to follow in the footsteps of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to start putting class material online for public access.

In the first meeting of BU Free Culture at the George Sherman Union backcourt yesterday, the group focused on the creation of an OpenCourseWare program, similar to that of MIT, which recently opened the program to allow the public to browse through class notes, lectures and assignments of any of the school’s 1,800 courses.

“BU should be more open with its information,” said Free Culture President Rich Jones, a College of Arts and Sciences sophomore. “It is very easy to turn a school into an open-access school, and it would be very beneficial to the public.”

“We want to help teachers to use OpenCourseWare,” Jones said. “It’s harder for us as students to ask for [the program]. The goal is to get teachers to advocate, too.”

CAS computer science associate professor Leo Reyzin said the website would be a useful tool for students to prepare and organize for classes, and said “there is certain value to the transitory nature of the lectures.”

Free Culture hopes to have an OpenCourseWare program running within some departments on a trial basis.

In addition to OpenCourseWare, Free Culture plans on addressing other issues related to the dwindling of individual privacy, including issues with the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America.

“There are major privacy concerns [at BU],” Jones said. “[BU] can monitor your instant messages, emails and which websites you use.”

Free Culture is a chapter of FreeCulture.org, an international student organization that advocates public involvement in intellectual property issues.

“You don’t have to be an activist to add to the global understanding of culture,” said CAS sophomore Paul Sawaya.

http://media.www.dailyfreepress.com/media/storage/paper87/news/2007/12/07/News/New-Group.Aims.To.Put.Bu.Lectures.Online.For.Public-3139008.shtml

First Meeting, Mailing List

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

Well I thought that was pretty successful. Nice to meet all of you, thanks for showing up!

For those that didn’t, we talked about the obstacles and resources involved with getting an OpenCourseWare program set up. It seems that at this point the challenge isn’t really a technical one, but rather actually getting teachers to use it, especially those who are less tech-savvy or who don’t have many digitally-based course materials, such as those in the social sciences. We also decided to start an OCW test server in the Computer Science department at BU, as an example which could eventually be expanded to other departments and schools.

Outside of the OCW project, we also discussed other relevant digital issues on campus, such as the legal process involved with the **AA lawsuits and with the warrant-less surveillance of in dorm communication. As it stands, we just need more information about how exactly they are doing this, and then we should talk to a lawyer about the legality of it. Is Boston University following all of the laws required of Internet Service Providers?

Also, I have started a mailing list, which will probably be our primary method of communication among group members. To subscribe, send an email to bufc-subscribe@freelists.org or use the form below, to post to it, email bufc@freelists.org, and to view the archive, go to http://www.freelists.org/archives/bufc/

Enter your email address:


That’s all for now!

Rich


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