|
|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
This practical guide is aimed specifically at information
professionals who are often those responsible for copyright
compliance in their organisation. Copyright infringement can carry
both civil and criminal penalties, making it essential for those
responsible to get it right. This new edition has been updated to
take account of recent developments concerning Crown copyright, and
the proposed EC Directive on harmonising certain aspects of
copyright and related rights. There is a new chapter on licensing
agreements for electronic information, and an updated list of
useful organisations.
This guide examines the use of technology for sharing information,
both within an organisation, and between companies and their
clients and customers. It looks in particular at the use of push/
pull technologies for delivering current awareness services. The
guide also discusses the pros and cons of the technology,
particularly information overload, and suggests a number of ways of
minimising the problems. The guide contains a useful list of books,
reports, journals and other information sources. Contents:
Introduction; Intranets; Extranets; Groupware; Case studies;
Push/pull technologies; Information overload; Key players; Useful
information sources; References; Further reading.
This title is a clear and detailed account of the law and practice
of copyright, explained in a user-friendly manner. Coverage
includes changes in licensing developments and electronic copyright
progress, and updates arising from EU harmonisation of copyright
law. There is also information on design right and
copyright-related rights such as recording and performing rights. A
glossary of terms and an index help to make this a key reference
guide to a notoriously complex area of information management.
Provides readers with a listing of some of the most useful business
and industry information sources available freely on the
InternetCovers: sources of useful free business and industry
information, sections on different industrial sectors, business
information portals. Looks at things from the point of view of
people doing business in the United Kingdom and also from the
perspective of UK exporters with alphabetical listing of
organisations, information providers, subject index and glossary.
Provides readers with a listing of some of the most useful business
and industry information sources available freely on the Internet
Covers: sources of useful free business and industry information,
sections on different industrial sectors, business information
portals. Looks at things from the point of view of people doing
business in the United Kingdom and also from the perspective of UK
exporters with alphabetical listing of organisations, information
providers, subject index and glossary.
The third edition of this work provides a clear but detailed
account of the law and practice of copyright, written in lay
language. It has been completely revised by a collaborative team,
whilst maintaining its familiar layout. Main changes occur in:
licensing developments; electronic copyright progress; the
international context; and the latest user guidelines. Updated with
changes arising from EU harmonization of copyright law, the text
includes "database right" which can apply alongside copyright or
involve non-copyright items. There is also some coverage of design
right, and copyright-related rights such as recording and
performing rights.
This guide examines the use of technology for sharing information,
both within an organisation, and between companies and their
clients and customers. It looks in particular at the use of push/
pull technologies for delivering current awareness services. The
guide also discusses the pros and cons of the technology,
particularly information overload, and suggests a number of ways of
minimising the problems. The guide contains a useful list of books,
reports, journals and other information sources. Contents:
Introduction; Intranets; Extranets; Groupware; Case studies;
Push/pull technologies; Information overload; Key players; Useful
information sources; References; Further reading.
Privacy is a core value of librarianship and yet as a concept, it
is difficult to define and in practice, a challenge to uphold. This
groundbreaking new book considers how privacy issues can arise in a
library context and what library and information professionals can
do to protect the privacy of their users. A Practical Guide to
Privacy in Libraries features a wide range of practical examples of
such issues, providing insights and practical steps which readers
can follow. In-depth case studies and scenarios support the
examples laid out in the book, while examples of data breaches
which have occurred in a library setting, and the lessons we can
learn from them, are also included. The book also covers the main
legislation governing data protection - GDPR - which will be
particularly relevant to European librarians, and international
librarians offering services to EU citizens. The book provides a
range of tools through which libraries can communicate how they
handle the personal data of their users whilst ensuring that they
are following best practice with their privacy policy statements,
their privacy audits and data protection impact assessments.
Privacy is not the same thing as data protection, and the book
outlines the differences between these two concepts. Nevertheless,
the book has been written with the requirements of data protection
law very much in mind. Written in a highly practical manner, this
book is essential reading for library and information professionals
who need to understand and support privacy in the library setting
and a useful reference for students and researchers in the field
who need to understand this topic in practice.
Essential Law for Information Professionals, fourth edition,
provides up-to-date and easy-to-follow practical guidance on the
law as it affects information management and the principles
underlying practice. Using individual cases to illustrate these
core principles and contextualise regulations, it cuts through the
legalese to provide exactly what's needed in an easily digestible
format showing examples of how the law has worked in practice in
specific legal cases. The book gives readers the tools to quickly
assess legal hazards and identify solutions. Information law is a
particularly fast moving area of law. In the eight years that have
passed since the best-selling third edition was published, there
have been many changes to the legislation and numerous legal cases
which have further developed our understanding of the law. The
fourth edition fully reflects those changes, which include: a new
chapter on library law which covers the legal framework for
libraries (concentrating on legislation and soft law relevant to
libraries) implementation of the GDPR through the Data Protection
Act 2018 a major overhaul of the copyright exceptions, and the 2018
implementation of the Marrakesh Treaty the Re-Use of Public Sector
Information Regulations 2015 and the implications of the 2018
proposals for a new re-use directive extension of the public
lending right scheme to e-books CILIP's ethical framework.
Essential Law for Information Professionals is an essential guide
for anyone working in the information professions. It is also the
ideal legal textbook for students of information studies and
librarianship.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Moonfall
Halle Berry, Patrick Wilson, …
Blu-ray disc
R314
Discovery Miles 3 140
|