Alan Inouye's July 6 Public Policy & Advocacy Update

RF is as always happy to share Mr. Inouye’s updates on ALA’s advocacy and general news of interest to library ebook aficianados, with thanks for his continuing efforts to keep us all current. The news about “Techopalooza” is especially intriguing. It is perhaps too much to hope, at least yet, for that libraries will see legislation to allow us to circulate ebooks as we circulate print, but perhaps the idea will at least surface!:

Free Webinar: Ready to Vote: Hosting National Voter Registration Day at Your Library, July 23, 3:00 p.m. eastern

https://ala-events.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rZFGGH-bQ4KyNVarfbmTDg

Sen. Reed and Rep. Levin introduce Library Stabilization Fund Act to provide $2 billion to IMLS for coronavirus recovery for the nation's libraries:  ALA’s press release; One-page bill summary; Twitter post (please RT); ALA’s action alert (please act); Rep. Levin’s announcement; Sen. Reed’s announcement

ALA joins comments of the Public Interest Spectrum Coalition to the FCC on unlicensed use of the 6 Ghz band. https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1279704128755765248

https://ecfsapi.fcc.gov/file/106292701930754/PISC%20Comments_6%20GHz%20FNPRM_FinalAsFiled_062920.pdf

ALA is pleased to endorse (and ALA is in Majority Whip James E. Clyburn's news release) H.R. 7302 the Accessible, Affordable Internet for All Act.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1275903855289647108

https://www.majoritywhip.gov/?press=clyburn-rural-broadband-task-force-and-house-democrats-introduce-accessible-affordable-internet-for-all-act

ALA joined letter led by Demand Progress & Lincoln Networks: More money for legislative branch is prudent. Especially to bolster capacity for research, technology (incl. remote access), & expertise.

https://s3.amazonaws.com/demandprogress/letters/Strengthening_the_Legislative_Branch_by_Increasing_its_302b_Allocation_2020-06-22.pdf

Comments of ALA & ACRL submitted to White House OSTP for Request for Information 85 FR 9488, Public Access Federally-Funded Research: Yes there should be immediate open access to taxpayer-funded research. Comments begin on p. 18.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1277885674960625665

https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/Open-Access-RFI-Comments-Reduced-5.pdf

Congrats to Ray Pun as new President-elect, Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA) & incoming President Candice Mack. Ray & Candice are both members of ALA Policy Corps.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1279718335933042688

https://www.apalaweb.org/apala-executive-board-2020-2022-election-results/

NEWS AND ARTICLES

Senators Markey, Van Hollen, Bennet, and Hassan filed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act to enact their Emergency Educational Connections Act, providing $4 billion for internet access/devices via libraries & schools.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1278454898527539201

https://www.markey.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/NDAA%20Amendment%20E-Rate%20COVID1.pdf

ALA supports: Sen. Klobuchar Helms Senate Version of Clyburn Broadband Bill: S. 4131 was introduced. Includes the $5 billion for libraries/schools to provide home access to those without.

https://www.multichannel.com/news/sen-klobuchar-helms-senate-version-of-clyburn-broadband-bill

Kara Swisher reports: You can officially call it Techopalooza. Rep. David Cicilline has told me in an interview today the four CEOs of the most powerful tech companies in the world – Apple, Facebook, Google and Amazon – have agreed to appear at a late July hearing on antitrust. Column coming!  ALA is optimistic that library eBooks will be included in the subsequent report from the House Judiciary Committee.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1278457602956038156

 While on eBooks… Big management reorg at Macmillan Publishers

https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/publisher-news/article/83661-macmillan-forms-trade-management-committee-to-address-key-issues.html

Tribute to Carolyn Ashcraft, State Librarian of Arkansas, on her retirement -- in the Congressional Record, by Sen. John Boozman (R-AR).

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1276485349359980544

https://www.congress.gov/congressional-record/2020/6/22/senate-section/article/s3125-3?loclr=cga-search

Imagining the Museum’s Smaller Future:  Post-pandemic, art museums should consider the benefits of a more focused, intimate approach.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/imagining-the-museums-smaller-future-11593554230

'We're back in business': UK bookshops see sales soar. Well, a bit of hope for the future from across the pond.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1276843882936926210

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/jun/23/were-back-in-business-uk-bookshops-see-sales-soar

COVID has changed our lives — buildings should change, too

https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/politics/503069-covid-has-changed-our-lives-buildings-should-change-too#.XvnjJQXeAbE.twitter

Bibliotheca Now also offers RBDigital Titles

Last week, Bibliotheca issued a press release touting their offerings of RBDigital content.

“We are very excited to be able to offer this exciting new content in cloudLibrary. The new collection includes over 10,000 Recorded Books and W.F. Howes titles as well as more than 1,300 Graphic Audio titles that have never before been available outside of Graphic Audio’s own website and app. These additions will be added to our existing catalogs of HighBridge, Tantor, and Gildan that we’ve sold for some time. All titles are compatible with SimplyE and offer libraries an excellent opportunity to refresh their collection during this time when so many are depending on digital media,” says Tom Mercer, Senior Vice President of Digital Products, bibliotheca.

The statements adds “RBmedia’s Recorded Books, Graphic Audio, and W.F. Howes content collections will be available for purchase under the one book/one user model within cloudLibrary by mid-July. Once titles are older than one year, they will automatically be available through the pay-per-use model.”

RF thanks Mr. Mercer for mention of the SimplyE app. SimplyE could already handle RBDigital content, and It is good to know that the titles will remain accessible on the “one app to rule them all” platform if licensed through Bibliotheca.

It would seem that KKR is equal opportunity when it comes to RBDigital content, with KKR-owned OverDrive having previously announced RBDigital content availability. RF is glad of it and hopes that KKR might offer the content through any library vendor that would like it, including the DPLA Exchange. Would it be too much to hope that the content might be available direct to SimplyE deploying libraries, which would not need a vendor app (and price cut) to deploy it? We could find a way to house it. Perhaps so. But, in the words of the old song, “Wouldn’t it be nice . . . “

Association of Research Libraries Urges End to Litigation against Internet Archive

The ARL has weighed in on the suit by 4 publishers against the Intern Archive, urging that the suit be abandoned. RF reiterates its support for Controlled Digital Lending and supports the ARL statement.

The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) urges an end to the lawsuit against the Internet Archive filed early this month by four major publishers in the United States District Court Southern District of New York, especially now that the National Emergency Library (NEL) has closed two weeks earlier than originally planned.

For nearly 25 years, the Internet Archive (IA) has been a force for good by capturing the world’s knowledge and providing barrier-free access for everyone, contributing services to higher education and the public, including the Wayback Machine that archives the World Wide Web, as well as a host of other services preserving software, audio files, special collections, and more. Over the past four weeks, IA’s Open Library has circulated more than 400,000 digital books without any user cost—including out-of-copyright works, university press titles, and recent works of academic interest—using controlled digital lending (CDL). CDL is a practice whereby libraries lend temporary digital copies of print books they own in a one-to-one ratio of “loaned to owned,” and where the print copy is removed from circulation while the digital copy is in use. CDL is a practice rooted in the fair use right of the US Copyright Act and recent judicial interpretations of that right. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many academic and research libraries have relied on CDL (including IA’s Open Library) to ensure academic and research continuity at a time when many physical collections have been inaccessible.

As ARL and our partner library associations acknowledge, many publishers (including some involved in the lawsuit) are contributing to academic continuity by opening more content during this crisis. As universities and libraries work to ensure scholars and students have the information they need, ARL looks forward to working with publishers to ensure open and equitable access to information. Continuing the litigation against IA for the purpose of recovering statutory damages and shuttering the Open Library would interfere with this shared mutual objective.

A Press Release From OverDrive about RBmedia

Here is part of a press release from OverDrive, explaining that OD “will acquire RBmedia’s digital library business, specifically the RBdigital platform in North America, the United Kingdom and Australia.”

RF noted that this was a possible outcome when the KKR buy out was first announced. RF withholds comment until we see the implementation and any changes that may occur with this event. Integrating platforms seems like a good idea, but competetion is never a bad thing for controlling costs.

Many of you know that KKR also owns RBmedia, a digital publishing business which includes Recorded Books and the RBdigital lending platform . . . .

Many libraries have told us that they would benefit from having Recorded Books and RBmedia content broadly available on the OverDrive platform and would welcome a reduction in the effort required to manage collection development and patron support on their digital platforms. With these goals in mind, OverDrive will acquire RBmedia’s digital library business, specifically the RBdigital platform in North America, the United Kingdom and Australia.

This means that over the coming months, all RBdigital library customers and RBdigital app users will be migrated to the OverDrive platform and Libby. We expect that the OverDrive platform will be enhanced with content that was unique to the RBdigital platform, including new Recorded Books audiobook releases, and we will be exploring additional content relationships such as digital magazines from ZINIO. After the customer and patron migration is complete, the RBdigital platform will be discontinued.

There will be no change to RBmedia’s market-leading publishing businesses which will continue to supply their titles to libraries and direct-to-consumer services worldwide. These brands include Recorded Books, Tantor Media, HighBridge, Kalorama Audio, ChristianAudio, Gildan Media, GraphicAudio, W.F. Howes in the United Kingdom, and Wavesound in Australia.

What this means to you

• If you are a customer of RBdigital, we are committed to keeping you well informed as we prepare to make this transition and as we continue to serve your patrons during this transition. Once the migration is complete, we will provide the same high quality experience and service now complemented with the new collections of titles from the RBdigital catalog. We will provide more details, including FAQs, as we get closer to the date of the initial migrations.

• If your library is not a customer of RBdigital, there will be no change to your OverDrive service. Once we make updates to OverDrive Marketplace, you will be alerted to the new collections of RBmedia content available for your collection on the OverDrive platform. What’s next To librarians offering your readers the RBdigital service, you will receive details about the planned migration in the coming weeks. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to your OverDrive Account Manager or drop me a note.

Steve Potash
Founder and CEO

Alan Inouye's ALA Public Policy & Advocacy Update, June 22

Not as much of interest for digital content aficianados, but lots of interesting news:

Our program at the 2020 Virtual Event. Session on library advocacy and civic engagement, moderated by Rob Banks, Chair, ALA Committee on Legislation: https://eventscribe.com/2020/ALA-Annual/fsPopup.asp?Mode=presInfo&PresentationID=737610

 Several members of the ALA Policy Corps are participating in sessions at the Virtual Event:

Chair's Program - LRRT - Research Matters: Strengthening our Values, Defining Our Practice, with Ann Ewbank (Cohort I):  https://www.eventscribe.com/2020/ALA-Annual/fsPopup.asp?Mode=presInfo&PresentationID=689132 

Making Your Library Sustainable for Your Community and Our Future (NMRT LIVE), with Ray Pun (Cohort II): https://www.eventscribe.com/2020/ALA-Annual/fsPopup.asp?Mode=presInfo&PresentationID=689176

Retention efforts of minority librarians in librarianship from the perspectives of early, middle and advanced career librarians (health science, academic, public, school-media, and special libraries), also with Ray Pun: https://www.eventscribe.com/2020/ALA-Annual/fsPopup.asp?Mode=presInfo&PresentationID=689162

 Advocating for Your Library: The E’s of Libraries® and Collecting Stories, with Lori Fisher (Cohort II):  https://www.eventscribe.com/2020/ALA-Annual/fsPopup.asp?Mode=presInfo&PresentationID=730963

-- ALA ACTIVITIES

American Library Association joined The Leadership Conference & other groups to call on Congress to take swift action on meaningful police reform.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1268860076036632576

Federal Relief for School Libraries Will Require State and Local Advocacy, AASL KnowledgeQuest, by Kevin Maher & Megan Cusick

https://knowledgequest.aasl.org/federal-relief-for-school-libraries-will-require-state-and-local-advocacy/

 ALA joins statement led by National Coalition Against Censorship urging protection of 1st Amendment rights of journalists & demonstrators. https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1271100019144302592

 Authors Guild supports our federal ask for IMLS funding for coronavirus relief.

https://www.authorsguild.org/industry-advocacy/ag-supports-demand-for-increased-library-funding/

ALA joins letter led by the National League of Cities to urge Congress to step up for coronavirus recovery funding to support municipal governments.

https://www.nlc.org/sites/default/files/users/user52651/Cities%20are%20Essiental%20Congressional%20Leadership%20Letter%20FINAL.pdf

PLA President Ramiro Salazar letter in the New York Times urging Congressional support for libraries for coronavirus recovery

https://twitter.com/ALALibrary/status/1266028998972387329

ALA endorses the "Remote Learning During Covid-19 Initiative" spearheaded by the Schools, Health, and Libraries Broadband (SHLB) Coalition and others.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1271116318851371009

ALA, with partners ARL and AALL submit comments to the U.S. Office of Management and Budget on proposed Revisions to Uniform Freedom of Information Act Fee Schedule and Guidelines (85 FR 26499). Letter from ALA with partners ARL and ACRL.

http://www.ala.org/advocacy/sites/ala.org.advocacy/files/content/Sign-ons/FOIA%20fee%20guidelines%20-%20libraries%202020-06-02.pdf

Ann Ewbank op-ed on broadband in the Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle. She is a member of the ALA Policy Corps.

https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/opinions/guest_columnists/pandemic-or-not-montana-needs-robust-broadband/article_1305b2cd-d955-5582-a195-4d6bdc5da34c.html?fbclid=IwAR0MyScrDTmq2GxIf-Dt30ziuDfsJg7whRG4rcroI-q3bneKIsuA4AMbqRQ

Letter to the editor about the service of university libraries during the pandemic. Letter from Sara Benson, member of our ALA Policy Corps.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1268194999029714944

Letter to the editor on libraries and how they help during a national emergency and during the recovery phase--in Peninsula Daily News (Wash.). Also, Samantha Hines is a member of our ALA Policy Corps.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1266797137221869575

Article in The City (NYC):  NYC Public Libraries Mull Grab-and-Go Book Pickup Service. Includes discussion of future directions for digital content and services.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1266304194002092033

 -- ARTICLES

Important aspects of the recent Sec. 512 report from the U.S. Copyright Office are problematic for us.

https://twitter.com/recreateco/status/1268911705779830784

 How COVID-19 is Affecting State Budgets & 2020 Elections

https://fiscalnote.com/blog/how-covid-19-will-affect-novembers-2020-state-legislature-elections?utm_source=email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=EM-2020-06-10-1591-How_COVID_Affects_State_Sessions_Blog&utm_content=EMAIL-01&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWldFMFpqbGxOVEkzTkRNeCIsInQiOiJXTlRLUzlSWlwvR3gxYU81QjJcLytFZmo3OVpEK1BVUytpVmU4OWhvQWlQemJlcFVCZ0Q0UklJZ3NGU1loTVRpYjVmWWhcL2NRd1lmdFNnWFdYRjVVYUJaQ0dvR3dqZzNQbFFVaitFRkVOcEFUN1VJOUM3d1Bva0Z5Tm5kcU9IdFlDTCJ9

 Managing vacancies in a new or second-term administration

https://presidentialtransition.org/managing-vacancies-in-a-new-or-second-term-administration/?utm_source=Partnership+for+Public+Service+emails&utm_campaign=772a097c9d-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_01_10_08_47_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_3aed0f55fc-772a097c9d-213503653

New public policy head at the Association of Research Libraries

https://twitter.com/ARLnews/status/1266440216765751297

Digital Opportunity Equity Recognition (DOER) Program, created by FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, to recognize those who have helped make quality affordable broadband available during this emergency.

https://twitter.com/GeoffreyStarks/status/1270074437954670593

How to Network When You Can’t Meet Up With People, Wall Street Journal

https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-to-network-when-you-cant-meet-up-with-people-11591999983

Small Businesses Tackle New PPP Puzzle: Forgiveness, Wall Street Journal

https://www.wsj.com/articles/small-businesses-tackle-new-ppp-puzzle-forgiveness-11592136025?mod=searchresults&page=1&pos=1

Christopher Cox predicts the significant ways academic libraries will shift in terms of collections, services, spaces and operations as a result of the pandemic.

https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2020/06/05/academic-libraries-will-change-significant-ways-result-pandemic-opinion

 

Advocacy Alert: Tell Your Senators How Vital Libraries Are

From ALA’s Public Policy and Advocacy Office:

The HEROES Act may have slowed in the Senate, but leadership is still working behind the scenes on the next recovery package which may be announced in the next few weeks. 
 
America's libraries are in need of support, and we can't let our Senators leave them out - they need to understand how vital you are to your communities. Can you share a library impact story to show your Senators how important libraries are to your community?

Libraries across the country are facing historic budget shortfalls, many are announcing furloughs, and all are concerned with how to open safely. It is time for Congress to provide support so we can keep our communities connected and informed. That's why ALA is advocating for $2 billion in additional funding in the next package.

Libraries are centers of community and civic life. Help us convey this message to the Senate by sharing your story.

Thanks to your emails and calls, Congress included $50 million in the CARES Act for libraries to  address the digital divide. IMLS has distributed the majority of these funds to all U.S. states and territories and its impact has been extremely positive. Make sure the Senate understands that libraries are poised to support their communities in the recovery and they are swiftly putting the funds to good use-if you can keep your doors open! Email your Senators today.

As we move forward with the $2 billion dollar ask, we will be in touch again soon. Please know your support and advocacy inspire us every day, and we thank you for the work you do.

Thank you for standing with libraries,
ALA's Public Policy & Advocacy Team

RF encourages you to voice your support!

An Update on the Internet Archive's Libraries

In response to the lawsuit by four publishers, the Internet Archive (IA) announced that it will close its National Emergency Library tomorrow, two weeks ahead of the originally scheduled June 30.

The IA has released a blog post with testimonials to the positive impact the National Emergency Library, such as “So grateful that the NEL is there to help our kids stay connected with their schoolwork.“ and “The NEL has been a relief and lifeline to diverse materials that are not accessible or out of financial reach for me and my family.“

Adds Chris Freeland of the IA, “If you’d like to share your own story of how you used the NEL and the impact it made, please let us know. We will not share your response unless you give explicit permission. “

The IA will continue to offer the Open Library. RF reiterates its support of the Open Library’s use of Controlled Digital Lending (CDL) and points readers uncertain of CDL’s legal underpinnings to this site for a full discussion.

PRH Extends End Date on Story Permissions

Penguin Random House’s Senior VP for Library Sales and Digital Strategy Skip Dye emailed RF to say that the publisher is “extending the end date of our Story Time Temporary Permissions program to August 31, 2020. Details about the extension and some clarifications around the Open License have been made. You’ll find all the details here.”

Added Dye, “Thank you for your shared commitment to storytelling and reading, and to our mutual belief in the power of books to connect us—especially during times like these.”

RF thanks PRH for working to make library story times easier during the pandemic!

A Longer Response to the CRS

As posted elsewhere, ReadersFirst is requesting libraries to consider adapting the Rhode Island Library Association and Ocean Sate Libraries’ response to the Congressional Research Service to send their own congressional representatives for consideration. RF has, however, penned a response of its own to consider some of the further ramifications of the CRS report. For those possibly looking for a deep dive (if there are any such people), here it is:

On April 28th, the Congressional Research Service (CRS), a “nonpartisan shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress [operating] solely at the behest of and under the direction of Congress,” released a “Legal Sidebar, COVID-19 and Libraries: E-Books and Intellectual Property Issues. It “explains how copyright law governs e-book lending; describes how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected e-book accessibility; and outlines some possible legal approaches Congress may consider.”  While we, a group of librarians, library or library consortium administrators, and employees of the American Library Association, appreciate and encourage Congressional attention to the issue of library access to ebooks and agree with many points in the Sidebar, we find it somewhat biasedslanted. to the publishers and suggest that it ignores the perspectives of librarians, some authors, and readers. There are publisher perspectives in the report.  Where are the perspectives from libraries, authors, physical and digital distributors, and readers? We offer the following comments in hopes of better informing Congress and the public about the difficulties libraries face providing ebooks, and not only in a time of pandemic. 

General Reflections

Libraries don’t seek to put publishers out of business. Libraries want to be treated fairly and want to see all players in the industry succeed.  All are, or should be, partners in a time when reading as a pastime and source of information is under challenge by often less reliable sources of information.  What is not represented at all in the CRS report is the role of libraries in marketing new authors and books to readers.  Libraries are part of the economic engine of the publishing industry, fostering discovery of titles and ultimately generating patron purchase of titles.

While the issue of library readers’ access to ebooks is exacerbated by COVID-19, this issue is not new and has been in discussion by the industry for a decade. The Big 5 publishers (then Big 6) at first did not allow libraries to license their publications at all. Later, at least one initially allowed but then prohibited access. In spite of careful Digital Rights Management (RDRM) being in place in library-provided ebooks, preventing piracy, and severe limits on patron borrowing under licensing, the big publishers have been cautious at best and in some cases recalcitrant about providing digital access for library readers.

Mention is made in the Sidebar in several places of library ebooks as “frictionless” or “free of barriers.” This has been one publisher claim for years; indeed, in those places, the Sidebar appears sounds like an interview with Macmillan CEO John Sargent rather than a balanced and fact-based review of the situation. The premise of this argument is flawed, the argument itself a  canard.  In fact, publisher licensing restrictions and pricing combine to prevent easy access to many titles, while even the better designed commercial library digital content vendors’ interfaces can be confusing and require librarian assistance for many patrons to use.  An argument can be made that there is more friction with library ebooks than there is with print books.

An important note that is missing here is the role of libraries in equity of access, especially for those who are underserved and the wrong side of the digital divide. Reading is a right; people should not have to break out credit cards to become informed participants in our democracy.

Another factor that is missing from this analysis is the impact of “monopolies,” and their negative influence on all players in the industry.  The elephant in the room is Amazon.com, which currently does not allow any library reader access to its “exclusive” content. Last week one of us had to tell 3 patrons that the ebooks they wanted could not be ordered because they were Amazon exclusives and not available to libraries.

But let us look at the CRS report section by section

 “Legal Background”

This section fails to address the original premise of copyright law:  “The primary purpose of copyright law is not so much to protect the interests of the authors/creators, but rather to promote the progress of science and the useful arts—that is—knowledge.” (https://lib.siu.edu/copyright/module-01/purpose-of-copyright-law.php ) We argue that current licensing restrictions privilege creators/publishers at the expense of readers and so inhibit the sharing of knowledge.   

“Libraries and the First Sale Doctrine”

The report makes this claim, which is erroneous in many ways and very much open to dispute: “Even so, the physical impediments to checking out a book from a library (e.g., library membership, traveling to the library, physical limitations on the number of copies) maintained incentives for consumers to buy physical copies from publishers, and there was little risk of piracy through physical copying. The development of ebooks, however, arguably shifted this balance.” Let’s us look at the various “frictions” library ebooks have when compared to print:

  • Friction: required library card - same as print

  • Friction: one-copy-one-user - same as print

  • Friction: preventing piracy--copying by breaking DRM is HARDER than with a photocopier, which can be used by a child.  More pirating occurs with print copying of chapters or even entire books and subsequent sharing online via .PDF, with physical books now far easier to pirate than DRM protected library e-books.

  • Friction: “traveling to the library” -- it is true that patrons can access ebooks without visiting the library, but that ease is offset by the technical challenges faced by many users:

    • Lack of skill to use ebook apps--many, especially seniors, must go to the library to have their devices set up and to learn how to get ebooks from the library. Libraries do thousands and thousands of such teaching transactions every year.

    • Lack of technology, especially among the less economically fortunate, especially in a time of lay-offs and unemployment..

    • Lack of reliable Internet access, especially in more rural areas..

What has actually shifted with ebooks is not the balance between publishers and libraries (except to give publishers more power and to weaken libraries) is as follows:

  • Consumer preferences/demand.

  • A lack of ownership and restrictive licenses that impede use and that exacerbate the digital divide:

  • No interlibrary loan

  • No book sales / used book donations

  • The library’s ability to build lasting, varied, and deep collections to equal our print holdings even as digital resources become increasingly important--a problem especially felt during the current pandemic. 

“Libraries and Ebooks”

The report makes the following claim but ignores the perspective of the reading public: “From the publishers’ perspective, this difference in treatment is justified because e-books seemingly present a greater threat to retail sales than physical books. Unlike physical books, library patrons can check out, download, and read e-books on their smartphones from their home. Accordingly, whereas there are numerous barriers to checking out a physical book from a library, there are nearly no barriers to checking out, reading, and returning an e-book, beyond having access to the requisite technology (e.g., a compatible device, the correct app).”

And where is the libraries’ perspective on this? As pointed out above, “friction” and barriers to library ebooks are in fact real. What is this threat to retail sales?  No publisher has released information when making this claim. Let’s see the numbers, please! The report mentions “Beyond having access to the requisite technology” as if that were a snap of the fingers to fix. No mention is made of broadband access, as if that alone is not a barrier for many in rural areas or even in more disadvantaged urban areas.

The report says “Certain publishers have experimented with more restrictive policies. For example, in November 2019 Macmillan implemented a policy where it would not license e-books to libraries during the first eight weeks after a title’s release. Macmillan explained that those early weeks were key for profits and that libraries were ‘cannibalizing sales.’ This led to many libraries boycotting Macmillan purchases entirely. Macmillan eventually ended this policy in March 2020.” Again, the report gives a publisher perspective without discussing the library perspective.  It is certainly appropriate to include perspectives from the industry, but here again this document only references publishers, not libraries, authors, distributors, and readers.

It should be pointed out that libraries individually and library groups such as ALA, ULC, CULC, and COSLA tried engaging with Macmillan to find mutually acceptable solutions only to be ignored or stiff-armed. The ALA set up the #EBooksForAll campaign to engage readers, not to attack publisher sales, but this less confrontational approach gets no mention. We are willing to view publishers as partners but Macmillan’s effort to limit public access to information, even if libraries were willing to pay for access, should be anathema in a democratic society.

“Ebook Lending During COVID-19”

Our group makes no comment about the legality of the Internet Archive’s “National Emergency Library” (which is different than its Open Library, a service that rests fairly and appropriately on Controlled Digital Lending) other than to say that looking only at this one instance of library ebook use ignores the experience and valid concerns most public libraries in the crisis: in a time when demand is exploding, in many cases up 50% and more than the months before the crisis, publisher pricing and licensing still greatly reduce access and make it difficult to perform their democratic mission in a time when the public even more needs valid and legitimate information to oppose the inaccuracies and false claims that may so readily be found on social media and other manifestations of the Web. Library users wish to participate in real-time conversations surrounding current events, not wait 12 months when the "current event" is over and their place on the long waiting lists  on many popular library ebooks titles might finally be reached.

“Implications for Congress”

The CRS report presents three options for Congressional Action.  Of these three, the third option (“provide limited copyright immunity for library e-book lending, while stopping short of a full digital first sale doctrine”) seems problematic for two reasons.  First, we believe that as long as libraries do not create “extra” copies of materials, existing copyright already allows some digital lending practices.  By digitizing a book, circulating it one user at a time, and withdrawing the print copy into an archive from which it does not circulate, libraries already have this ability. It is the foundation of controlled digital lending (CDL). Libraries that have tried CDL have generally been responsible, willing to respect “take down” requests and not giving access to more current titles or even titles with existing publisher licenses.  Boston Public Library has even worked with publishers, including Little Brown and MIT, to expand access to older offerings in this way. If, however, Congress would like to enact legislation specifically enshrining CDL and even library ebook copyright immunity, perhaps limiting immunity to works at least 2 years old (when many titles are out-of-print or at least demand anyway), we would certainly approve. There is a second problem with this option, however, namely that “Congress could render any legal changes temporary by, for example, having them expire on a particular date or when the current national emergency ends.” A permanent solution to the publisher rights/library access issue is needed, not one that settles the matter only during the pandemic. And even if the library immunity was extended only to licensing and redistributing ebooks, issues of price and availability would still remain, which brings us to the second option discussed in the report. 

       The second option (“amend the copyright laws to introduce a digital version of the first sale doctrine”) would be a permanent solution. We suspect that if purchasing an ebook gave us the “right to re-sell or otherwise distribute that e-book,” publishers would immediately raise ebook prices, a fact which begs several questions.  Would publishers still be able to set one price for libraries while reserving another and far lesser cost for individuals? If so, would some sort of fair pricing need to be legislated--for example, libraries could not be charged more than 5 times the consumer price (relying on what consumers will pay to determine fair value)? What about entities such as Amazon, which sell to individuals but not to libraries--would this discrimination still be allowed? We agree it is time for Congress to “now reexamine the market and determine whether it has matured sufficiently and in a manner that would warrant further action,” considering all the ramifications and with the original intent of copyright in mind to ”promote the progress of science and the useful arts—that is—knowledge.” We wonder, however, if the publishers would agree, thus bringing us to Option 1.

Option 1 (“maintain the legal status quo. When publishers introduce new restrictions, libraries often push back”) has the seeming advantage of encouraging a fair market.  What we argue, however, is precisely that the status quo is unfair. Publishers need only raise their prices for us and tell libraries to purchase or not at these high prices.  The only option we have is not to buy and call public attention to unfair practices. This option does not get ebooks onto the devices of readers hungry for content, especially those in straitened financial circumstances. Licenses still remain unfair: most of the Big 5 offer only two-year licenses on ebooks, meaning we must constantly renew our collections and can never be certain of maintaining access to titles. A title that is $60 for 2 years will be $240 for 8 years--and we could only afford it by ignoring other titles. Time and again we have asked for a return to the perpetual license option from the Big 5 (even at a higher cost), and offered to develop alternative models (subscription or pay-per-use) at prices that would allow us access, only to be met by the Big 5 ignoring us and moving in concert to set similar restrictive licenses and nearly identical pricing to each other. Does this practice resemble the “agency pricing” that brought a judgement against the publishers and Apple in 2012? We fall back upon medium and smaller publishers and even indie content, to provide titles for our readers. We are not, however, treated as partners in reading by a group that controls some 90 to 95% of all best selling titles. Library readers deserve better access.  Some legislative action is needed to create an “equilibrium whereby libraries are able to lend e-books to fulfill their mission (albeit not as easily as they might like) and publishers and authors are able to profit (albeit not as much as they might like).” Without that action, if only mandating that we be able to have perpetual licenses so that we don’t have to renew every two years, equilibrium will never be reached.

Rhode Island Libraries Respond to the CRS

In April, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) published a “legal sidebar,” “COVID-19 and Libraries: E-Books and Intellectual Property Issues.”

While the report offers some interesting thoughts on possible changes in copyright that might benefit libraries providing digital content, it was not without its limits. The Rhode Island Library Association has responded to the CRS with comments worth considering, as follow below.

They have copied David Cicilline, Chairman, Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law to bring the report’s issues to his attention.

The ReadersFirst Working Group is asking its members to adapt this statement to send to their congressional representatives to present the library side on this important matter.:

Re: COVID-19 and Libraries: E-Books and Intellectual Property Issues

Dear Congressional Research Service,

We are truly thankful for the attention that national and state legislators are devoting to the important issue of copyright, licensing and library ebook lending.  It is critical that authors, publishers, libraries and readers come together to find a way forward.  However, the industry is dominated by a handful of monopolistic entities and a vocal minority that drive us apart.  Libraries are a part of the publishing industry, just as authors and publishers are part of ours.  We are partners who help people to learn, explore and grow through reading and who help authors and other creatives to find audiences and consumers for their works.

We are writing today, in particular, to address the recent report released by the Congressional Research Service entitled “COVID-19 and Libraries: E-Books and Intellectual Property Issues”.  In short, we are concerned that the report does not paint a complete picture of the situation.  We wish to address three important points that we hope will be more thoroughly and accurately addressed in future related research efforts, and we hope to inspire you to dig deeper into this important issue.

1. This issue has existed long before COVID-19.  Libraries have been reaching out to publishers for more than a decade to attempt to find balance in the industry.  In truth, we’ve had some successes.  However, it is still not possible for libraries to purchase the entire catalog of ebooks and audiobooks, to make that content available under fair and reasonable terms, and to do so at a fair price.  A growing list of ebooks and audiobooks are being held back by publishers, licensing terms are increasingly complex and restrictive, and prices continue to rise.

 While libraries are seeing increased use of their digital collections during the COVID-19 pandemic, those gains are overshadowed by the loss of use in our print collections.  Rhode Island libraries have seen a growth of more than 50% in ebook use coupled with a 95% reduction in the use of print books which are far greater in number.

2. There are arguably more barriers to library ebooks than there are to print books.  A common argument by a vocal minority of publishers is that libraries offer frictionless access to ebooks.  This is absolutely untrue.  As you can see below, ebooks (and digital audiobooks) present, at best, a similar level of friction.  We argue that ebooks present even greater barriers due to the digital divide.

3. This article is partial and is missing voices from other publishers and from libraries, authors and readers.  This is the most troubling aspect of this report to us.  There are, of course, authors and publishers who undervalue the role that libraries play in the publishing industry to expose consumers to new books and authors and to foster a lifelong love of reading.  However, there are also publishers who recognize and value libraries for the partners that we are.  This article presents one perspective from a vocal publisher who we suggest does not represent the entire industry.  We seek representation of other perspectives from the industry including libraries, authors, publishers, readers and technology experts.

We respectfully request that the Congressional Research Service revise this report to responsibly inform Congress on this issue.  In the publishing industry, we urge researchers to approach the Book Industry Study Group (bisg.org).  In the library industry, we urge researchers to approach the American Library Association (ala.org), the Chief Officers of State Library Agencies (cosla.org) and ReadersFirst (readersfirst.org).  We will gladly assist in making connections with important leaders across the industry if that would be helpful.

While we continue to explore collaborative industry solutions, we hope that Congress will explore legislative remedies that include a review of copyright legislation and unfair business practices by major industry entities that restrict competition, fair pricing and access.  We also believe in a “digital first sale doctrine” to protect libraries, readers and consumers from unfair terms.  Libraries are woven into the fabric of our democracy to ensure equitable access to information, knowledge and opportunity.  A credit card card should not be required.

We welcome any opportunity to be helpful to you in your efforts.  Please do not hesitate to reach out to us if we can be of service.

Respectfully yours,

Julie Holden

President, Rhode Island Library Association

Stephen Spohn

Executive Director, Ocean State Libraries

cc: The Honorable David Cicilline, Chairman, Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law