IFLA Statement on Controlled Digital Lending

Apologies for a long post with no original content, but IFLA has released a statement supporting Controlled Digital Lending that is worth reading by librarians. Enjoy!

IFLA Statement on Controlled Digital Lending

IFLA's Statement on Controlled Digital Lending was approved by the Governing Board in May 2021.

Controlled Digital Lending (CDL) has become widely talked about over the last two years, and in particular in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. While the specific term has only relatively recently come to be used[1], forms of controlled lending have been utilised for many years, for example in the context of document supply. As such, controlled lending has helped to fulfil the mission of libraries to support research, education and cultural participation within the limits of existing copyright laws.

Licensed eBooks have opened the door to a radical undermining of the traditional public interest functions and freedoms of libraries. These still exist for paper books, but with the advent of licensed eBooks, libraries are no longer free to decide when or what to purchase, with some publishers even refusing to sell to libraries. Controlled digital lending provides an alternative to a licensing approach, and so a means of redressing the balance.

This paper provides background on what CDL is, and provides an economic and legal case for all libraries and their users to be able to benefit from the approach. Library associations and libraries in individual countries and regions will need to consider their particular policy environment.

What is CDL?

CDL in the context of book lending promotes the idea that libraries are – or should be – able to lend out digitised copies of works in their collections on a strict owned-to-loaned ratio[2]. It applies to the lending of digital copies of in-copyright works, given that those already in the public domain (i.e. no longer subject to economic rights) can already be digitised and made freely available. This lending, crucially, is ‘controlled’ through the use of technological protection measures, which prevent illicit copying and limit the length of loan periods. In effect, it gives libraries a choice between digital and physical formats in how to give access to works in their collection.

Crucially, CDL is based on exceptions and limitations or “user rights” in copyright law, in contrast to market-based licensing solutions. In the United States it has been justified, in an article by David Hansen and Kyle Courtney[3], under the legal doctrine of fair use. The authors assert that digitisation and lending of an electronic copy by libraries is permitted after the exhaustion of rights following the first sale of the physical copy, as long as the total number of copies in circulation (physical and digital combined) does not exceed the number owned by the library, and each physical copy is withheld from public access for as long as a corresponding digital copy is on loan. There have also been moves to clarify the legal status of eLending in Europe, where the European Court of Justice has found that libraries are permitted to lend not just paper books but eBooks under existing copyright law.[4]

The compatibility of CDL with current laws is increasingly in the spotlight, given a case brought in the United States by a number of publishers against a key proponent of the approach, the Internet Archive.[5] If CDL is declared legal in the US, attention is likely to shift to other countries. Even if the specific approach to CDL used in the United States by the Internet Archive is deemed illicit, there remains a strong case for the principle of digitisation and lending by libraries of books using controlled lending technologies.

In reality, library users in other countries are already benefiting from CDL, for example when receiving electronic document supply copies, and in Canada, there are moves by some libraries to provide access to works in their own collections using the approach[6]

The Economic Case for CDL

A key reason why CDL is necessary is the failure of markets to provide access to works in digital form on a consistently fair basis. First of all, a very small share of books are currently available in digital form for libraries, due either to being out of print (and so no investment is made in releasing digital versions), a lack of resources in publishing houses, or a refusal to sell to libraries[7]. This effectively prevents libraries from fulfilling their mission in a digital age and undermines research and learning in society.

The COVID-19 crisis brought many of the availability and pricing issues of eBooks to the fore, as patrons could no longer physically visit the library and access had to switch to electronic overnight. Where eBooks are available for libraries to purchase, they are often licensed to libraries at significantly higher prices than their paper equivalent[8], or under much more restrictive conditions than for physical books. In some cases, libraries are obliged to buy into larger collections of eBooks as publishers will not allow access to specific desired titles only, which consequently reduces libraries’ freedom of choice to buy other books. This undermines the ability of a library to respond to the needs of researchers and the public, and exacerbates the already acute “monograph crisis”[9][10].

When there is no eBook available or terms and conditions are barriers, the possibility for libraries to digitise physical copies of legally-acquired works would mean that, in setting prices and conditions for eBooks and other electronic resources, rightsholders would need to apply the same principles as for physical books. In effect, it would break down the wall between the markets for physical books and eBooks, allowing for more competition between the two. This would help ensure the continued effectiveness of the safeguard that libraries provide against the negative consequences of poorly functioning eBook markets.

The Legal Case for CDL

Recognising that copyright laws vary from one country to the next, IFLA provides the following principles related to the implementation of CDL in libraries around the world. Each principle, in itself, should be reflected in national laws and libraries should seek to pursue these principles with policy makers where they are not. Collectively, they provide a sufficient basis for enabling controlled digital lending.

1) Freedom to acquire and lend represents a core function of the work of libraries

The freedom to acquire any book or other material it chooses and then lend it represents a key means for libraries to fulfil their mission to support education, research and access to culture.

Lending fills a gap in situations where purchase of a work is not appropriate – for example because they only need to use a small part of a work, because they are testing out a new author, or because they do not have the resources to buy a whole work etc. There is considerable evidence that lending contributes to future sales[11]. Lending also helps build the readers, researchers, and writers of the future, contributing to innovation and creativity. 

Importantly, lending does not represent an exclusive right under international law[12], and in most countries it takes place under the doctrine of exhaustion or the first sale principle. In those countries where lending rights do feature in legislation, moves towards Controlled Digital Lending will need to take account of this[13].

2) Digital uses should have at least the same flexibility as physical ones

While the ideas behind copyright have their roots firmly in the analogue age, they need to keep up with new usages. If this doesn’t happen, there is a risk that copyright will fail to deliver on the public interest goals that it aims to achieve. In Europe, at least, this argument was used in the VOB vs Stichting Leenrecht judgement[14] to justify the decision that eBooks fell under existing rules for library lending.

For IFLA this ‘technological neutrality’ should also protect against the deliberate or inadvertent use of contract terms and technological protection measures to prevent legitimate uses of works under exceptions and limitations.

This should therefore mean that libraries are able – either under the exhaustion principle or under a lending exception – to digitise and lend works electronically in the same way as they do physically. In the case of electronic lending, as long as core principles of CDL are respected – such as limited loan-periods and the use of a strict owned-to-loaned ratio, enforced through technological protection measures – the digitisation and subsequent lending of the created electronic book should be acceptable. IFLA believes that as a result of the VOB vs Stichting Leenrecht judgement, in some EU countries, this would already be permitted.

CDL extends the opportunity for use to additional locations. Forcing users to come to libraries is a source of discrimination against those who are less mobile or who live in remote areas.

3) It is acceptable to make use of more than one exception or limitation at a time

Exceptions will often need to be used in conjunction with others in order to be effective. For example carrying out text and data mining using a preserved copy of a work can entail two different exceptions. So too can giving access to a digitised copy of a work on a dedicated terminal inside a library, as established in the TU Darmstadt ruling[15] for countries in the European Union. As set out in the judgement in this case, exceptions often have to be combined for public interest purposes, as long as they remain consistent with the three-step test in the Berne Convention[16]

Conclusion

This position argues that there is a strong socio-economic case for enabling Controlled Digital Lending in libraries around the world, and that where a number of desirable and widely-recognised principles are respected (libraries’ ability to freely acquire and lend, the technological neutrality of law, the possibility to combine exceptions), its legal basis will in turn support the wider public interest.

In some countries in the European Union, the bases for CDL are likely to be already in place, and so all that will be required is for libraries to establish the applicability of the VOB vs Stichting Leenrecht judgement to their national situation. Where the legal conditions in countries globally are not in place, IFLA urges action to correct this, thus enabling libraries to digitise and lend eBooks on an owned-to-loaned ratio, and so realise further their potential to support learning, research and access to culture in a digital age.

IFLA Statement on Controlled Digital Lending

English (PDFMS Word)

French (PDFMS Word)

Spanish (PDFMS Word)

[1] Hansen, David and Courtney, Kyle (2018), A White Paper on Controlled Digital Lending of Library Books. Available at https://controlleddigitallending.org/whitepaper

[2] For example, if a library has one copy of the book in paper form it can digitise it, put the paper copy beyond public access, and only lend the eBook to a single user at a time . If the library has two paper copies the same principle should apply that no more than two copies (irrespective of the format) should be available at any one time to the public.

[3] Hansen and Courtney, ibid

[4] C174/15 Vereniging Opebare Bibliotheken vs Stichting Leenrecht http://curia.europa.eu/juris/liste.jsf?num=C-174/15

[5] Hachette Book Group Inc v. Internet Archive 1:20-cv-04160, US District Court, S.D. New York. Available at https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/17211300/hachette-book-group-inc-v-internet-archive/

[6] Canadian Libraries Internet Archive Canada at https://archive.org/details/toronto

[7] SCONUL (2018) Understanding the value of the CLA licence to UK higher education, https://www.sconul.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/CNAC%20Research%20Project%20Report%20FINAL%20with%20logos.pdf

[8] For a single user licence an eBook can be ten times the price of the paper version. See Academic EBook Campaign: https://academicebookinvestigation.org/

[9] The Forever Decline: Academia’s Monograph Crisis: https://openscience.com/the-forever-decline-academias-monograph-crisis/

[10] The Monograph Crisis: Open Access for Art and Design Scholarship: https://blogs.openbookpublishers.com/the-monograph-crisis-open-access-for-art-and-design-scholarship/

[11] How Libraries Help Authors Boost Book Sales, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Forbes, April 12, 2019: accessed on the 15/01/2021: https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachelkramerbussel/2019/04/12/how-libraries-boost-book-sales/

[12] Berne Convention, WIPO website, accessed on the 15/01/2021: https://wipolex.wipo.int/en/treaties/textdetails/12214

[13] To note, and as set out in its Position on Public Lending Right (https://www.ifla.org/publications/the-ifla-position-on-public-lending-right--2016), IFLA recognises the importance of supporting authors to ensure ongoing production of new works. As such, IFLA encourages governments to look for more efficient and effective approaches than PLR, including improved contract terms, tax breaks and direct tools such as cultural funds. Where compensation under PLR is required, reflection will be necessary on its application to CDL. IFLA is strongly opposed to PLR on eBooks which are only available for a limited number of loans or time.

[14] Ibid.

[15] C117-13 Technische Universität Darmstadt vs Eugen Ulmer KG, http://curia.europa.eu/juris/liste.jsf?num=C-117/13

[16] WIPO website, Berne’s Convention: https://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/

The Internet Archive Announces Some Upcoming Events

The Internet Archive has some session announces sessions of interest to librarians, some of them with an European flavor.

July 13

Empowering Libraries Through Controlled Digital Lending
The Internet Archive's Open Libraries program empowers libraries to lend digital books to patrons using Controlled Digital Lending. Attendees will learn how CDL works, the benefits of the Open Libraries program, and the impact that the program is having for partner libraries and the communities they serve. Register here: July 13 @ 9am PT / 12pm ET

July 14
Implementation & Integration: CDL for All Libraries
For the second event in a series about the innovative library practice of Controlled Digital Lending, we'll hear from libraries, consortia, and librarians who are exploring CDL implementations at their institutions and communities with hands on learning around potential and existing solutions. Learn about building institutional CDL policies, user experience for patrons and staff, technological platforms, and how you can get involved with the CDL community. Bring your questions, ideas, and be prepared to dig in!

Cohosted by Library Futures, Internet Archive, Project Reshare, Open Library Foundation, and CDL Implementers. Register: July 14 @ 10am PT / 1pm ET

July 15
eBook Licensing in Europe and the Vanishing Library?
Unaffordable prices, an inability to buy eBooks due to a refusal to sell, bundling of unwanted titles in packages, and restrictions on research copying all affect access to eBooks in all types of libraries.

This session will explore in depth the acute difficulties faced not just by higher education, but also by public libraries, caused by publishers’ pricing and licensing practices, and discuss possible solutions, including the potential to solve many of the problems with legal solutions in copyright law that allow Controlled Digital Lending.

Organized by Knowledge Rights 21 – a new initiative bringing together IFLA, LIBER and SPARC Europe, made possible by Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin.
July 15 @ 9am ET / 3pm CET

July 22
Copyright Public Modernization Committee - Public Forum
The Library is convening a public meeting of the Copyright Public Modernization Committee (CPMC) on July 22 from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern to enhance communication and provide a forum for the technology-related aspects of the U.S. Copyright Office’s modernization initiative. The meeting will include an update from Library experts on the development of the Enterprise Copyright System (ECS), a discussion about Copyright IT modernization with the CPMC members and a public Q&A period.
July 22 @ 10am PT / 1pm ET

OverDrive Announces Some HC/HMH Terms

OverDrive has sent out an update on the HC acquisition of HMH.

Earlier this year, HarperCollins completed its acquisition of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. As a result of this acquisition, effective August 1, 2021, ebook titles from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt will be available in the Metered Access: 26 checkouts (one user) lending model, a change from their current One Copy/One User lending model for ebooks*.

*Note that this update does not impact titles from Houghton Mifflin College eCommerce, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Education, or Heinemann.

Additional details:

  • Any ebook titles purchased from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt before August 1, 2021 will remain in your collection in the One Copy/One User lending model.

  • Any ebook preorder titles with a street date of August 1, 2021 or later will be delivered in the Metered Access: 26 checkouts (one user) lending model upon the title’s publication date.

  • There are no changes to the lending model for audiobooks from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; they will continue to be available in the One Copy/One User lending model.

  • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt will soon begin offering a variety of ebook and audiobook titles in the Cost Per Circ lending model. 

No real surprises here. It’s good that titles acquired under the old terms will remain one copy/one user perpetual access. I hope everyone is stocked up on some of those classics (Tolkien, George Orwell) under the old terms! 

No mention of price here.  We can hope that HC will keep the prices down (and they have been perhaps the most fair of all the Big 5). HMH prices were VERY reasonable. I’d rather pay $13.95 for perpetual access to, say, The Hobbit than that same price for a 26 circ metered license, but at least the license is per circ and not the “exploding” time based license. 1984 was $12.94. That price range for a 26 circ metered license seems reasonable, offering us about what we’d expect from a physical copy of the book and respecting the publishers’ concerns about ebooks being “forever.”

 As for “Houghton Mifflin Harcourt will soon begin offering a variety of ebook and audiobook titles in the Cost Per Circ lending model, ” one comment. Meh. Per circ has been advantageous for publishers and library vendors, not so great for libraries. Give us per circ at $.25 or $.50 on these titles or so and maybe I’ll get a little more excited. At even $.99 per circ, forgetaboutit. I can do better under other terms. On many titles, simultaneous access just ain’t worth paying much more. Maybe if for a limited time, I could pay a set price for unlimited simultaneous downloads, it would be more attractive then pay-per-use on an ongoing basis.

Alan Inouye's Public Policy and Advocacy Updates, 6/5/21

Thanks to ALA Inouye, Senior Director, Public Policy & Government Relations in ALA Washington’s Office, for harvesting relevant items from the vast sea of information. Here’s a partial list of his recent updates:

Upcoming: Next episode of Maryland Library Association’s MLA Conversations, Friday, July 9, 2021 from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. Eastern (Episode 54). Topic: How the ebook public policy landscape is continuing to change. Panelists are Andrea Berstler, Michael Blackwell, and Alan Inouye.

https://www.facebook.com/MDLib

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe1pkAokE91LTMdCFU1EScqKCqEz7oHtjAFiK9tL7p1GKeogg/viewform

 Apply for the Emergency Connectivity Fund!

➢ ALA Resources

https://www.ala.org/advocacy/ECF

➢ Library love from the Acting Chairwoman of the FCC Jessica Rosenworcel

https://twitter.com/JRosenworcel/status/1409872727196979203

➢ Our Marijke Visser in the Indianapolis Business Journal talking ECF

https://www.ibj.com/articles/online-outreach

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1410951704254861312

 

Op-eds on library construction/renovation -- Build America's Libraries Act

Everett (Wash.) Herald: https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-local-libraries-key-infrastructure-for-communities/

Buffalo News: https://buffalonews.com/opinion/another-voice-proposed-federal-legislation-would-benefit-erie-countys-public-libraries/article_b2c06354-ba5f-11eb-acba-3f4fcb1e16fe.html

 

ALA announces Libraries Build Business coaches. Opportunities for free advice on entrepreneurship programs in public libraries, especially in underrepresented groups/communities.

https://www.ala.org/news/member-news/2021/06/ala-announces-libraries-build-business-coaches

 

Congrats to Jim Neal (ALA Senior Policy Fellow) and Todd Carpenter (Member of ALA Policy Corps) on their appointment to the Library of Congress Copyright Public Modernization Committee.

https://www.loc.gov/item/prn-21-034/library-of-congress-announces-copyright-public-modernization-committee/2021-06-22/

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1407651735661862913

ALA joins Communications Workers of America, National League of Cities, SHLB Coalition, and other groups to urge Congress to provide full funding for broadband to meet local needs for decades to come.

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1410287696703016967

 

ALA joins other public interest groups to call on President Biden to fill the vacant seat on the FCC immediately.

https://s3.amazonaws.com/demandprogress/letters/Letter-5th-FCC-Commissioner.pdf

 

Library of Congress announces the 2021 National Book Festival

https://www.loc.gov/events/2021-national-book-festival/about-this-event/

 

50th anniversary of ebooks -- facts, benefits, and timeline

https://twitter.com/AlanSInouye/status/1411607894940913664

 

Competition won't solve the digital divide — communities will (The Hill)

https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/560101-competition-wont-solve-the-digital-divide-communities-will

Rather's "What Unites Us: TGN" in Nevada

In an innovative partnership between publisher, libraries, and content vendor, the graphic novel version of Dan Rather’s What Unites Us is available for 8 weeks to all geo-located in Nevada.

In a press release, Las Vegas Clark-County Library District Executive Director Kelvin Watson welcomed this partnership (disclaimer: Mr. Watson is a member of the RF Working Group): "We are proud to sponsor the availability of this important new graphic novel to all residents of Nevada. It has been a pleasure to collaborate with Macmillan on this project as we explore new ways that public libraries and publishers can work together for our mutual benefit, to create a more accessible culture of reading for all."

Added Brian Heller, Vice President, academic, library, wholesale & international of Macmillan, “"We are very excited about this innovative partnership that brings this important graphic novel to readers in the State of Nevada. I'd like to thank Kelvin Watson of the Las Vegas Clark County Library District, Mitchell Davis of BiblioLabs, and their talented teams for all their efforts in bringing this project to fruition."

BiblioLabs, whose work on innovative licensing terms has been noted before on RF, is demonstrating nice leadership in creating the framework for sharing this content.

Mr. Watson has interviewed Mr. Rather about his book. Watch it here.

RF thanks all for their innovative spirt and expanding access to an important work in a time when the country sorely needs more of “what unites us.” May this event be an intimation of even better things to come for libraries, publishers, and library vendors!

EBookFriendly Celebrates the 50th Anniversary of the Ebook

Piotr Kowalczyk from Warsaw has written to ReadersFirst asking if we intend to write about the 50th anniversary of the ebook. RF’s interest tends towards to improving access to and enhancing the user experience of digital content in libraries today and in the immediate future, but we have found some of Mr. Kowalczyk’s information on this anniversary worthy of reposting.

Here’s his list of the 50 facts from the history of ebooks and audiobooks, including some that are lesser known: ebookfriendly.com/ebooks-audiobooks-facts-history/

Here is his infographic celebrating the 50th Anniversary: ebookfriendly.com/50-years-of-ebooks-timeline-benefits-infographic/

Happy anniversary, ebooks, and thanks, Piotr! RF hopes for many more developments in the next 50 years. For libraries today, it is vital that we work to make sharing digital content more sustainable and easy to access and enjoy for ALL readers, taking advantage of the great capacity of digital to serve accessibility needs. May we all be a part of making the next 50 years even better than the past.

A Student Asks for Help With an EBook Study

Hyba Ouazzani of Cardiff Metropolitan University in Wales has asked ReadersFirst for help in bringing attention to a survey. ReadersFirst is always interested in promoting research and so posts the following:

“As part of my programme requirements, I am undertaking a study on the viability of enhanced fiction ebooks in the digital publishing industry.

A large part of my research will be based on survey responses from readers of fiction from all over the world, and I was hoping that, as your organization works with ebooks and making them more accessible and available to libraries, you could share my survey with the Readers First staff and/or community by sharing the following link: https://forms.gle/fJ3gBtdebMMrNuuv5 It would be invaluable to my research efforts.

The survey is in English and can be shared via whatever channels you deem most appropriate. I do not require any mailing lists or other contact information; you can share it at your discretion with members of your community and/or staff who you feel might be interested in responding to the survey.

Participants will have the choice of receiving a copy of my eerie suspense ebook, Apartment, as a thank-you gift at the end of the survey.”

Participants will receive information about how the data collected will be used, how respondents’ privacy will be maintained, and the rights of participants to withdraw from the study. An ethics approval for this study is available.

RF wishes Ms. Ouazzani success with her studies and will post the results of this survey should she decide to share them.

A New Iteration of Library Simplified: The Palace Project

The Knight Foundation has provided a generous grant to The Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) and Lyrasis to launch the Palace Project. Built upon the open source Library Simplified architecture, it will be a new iteration of “the one app to rule them all”: content will launch from other platforms, including OverDrive, Baker & Taylor, Bibliotheca, and of course the DPLA’s own Content Exchange (now including Amazon Publishing titles, which are expect to be available in July), and Lyrasis’ new acquisition and partner, Biblioboard.

This development is significant because it shows that Library Simplified is growing. The pioneering New York Public Library is continuing to deploy an iteration of the app, and will be concentrating more on deployment in the New York area. Amigos and Califa are also deploying the app, as is State Of Georgia Library on its own. The new version of the app will launch in fall. We can expect the development of significant branding tools and help sheets (printable but mostly digital) for tech and patron use support.

ReadersFirst hails this development. The Palace Project harkens back to Carnegie’s vision of libraries as “Palaces for the People.” The name honors our profession’s tradition of inclusion of resources for many but transfigures any “elitist” connotation of the term palace by foregrounding libraries’ democratic mission to serve all as well as we can—in this case, getting content across many platforms to provide the easiest and most private patron experience. Library Simplified is the best example yet of an effort that realizes ReadersFirst principles, getting all content from one place, avoiding proprietary formats, being easy to use, and protecting patron information from outside entities.

Libraries that keep the first version of Library Simplified, SimplyE, will still be able to have DPLA accounts and access its unique content and variable license models. DPLA accounts remain free and (we can hope!) may soon be offering even more unique content from vendors that have not hitherto worked with libraries. With more developmental resources behind it, Palace may become an interesting option, especially for libraries interested in allowing readers to find all (or at least most) of their ebooks and digital audiobooks in one app.

RF hopes that the ability of the app to respond to accessibility commands will be enhanced even more.

DPLA has issued an invite to learn more: “We’ll be sharing more about The Palace Project at an open Coffee Chat on July 7th at 1 pm ET, please join us.”

PLA Statement to Vendors

The Board of the Public Library Association has released a statement to various library vendors encouraging the enhancement of their platforms to handle multiple and flexible models. Many library stakeholders, including ReadersFirst, have advocated with publishers, and many have responded. It won’t do us any good for publishers to offer the models if the library vendors can’t support them. The entire text of the statement is below. RF thanks PLA leadership for its advocacy!

On behalf of the Public Library Association board and our XXXX members, thank you for your work with publishers and public libraries to provide digital content to our communities across the country.  As you know, eLending has grown significantly during the pandemic and over the past decade, and public libraries are committed to improving digital content access to cultivate a love of reading and exploration today and into the future.

We need your help. Specifically, public library leaders would like more ways to buy eContent – which could be a real opportunity to sell more eContent. To make this possible, we are asking all eLending content aggregators to enable multiple lending models and display them together all in one place. Each title ideally will show a:

·         Metered‐access option (sequential loans, lower price point)

·         Perpetual use option (sequential loans, higher price point)

·         Concurrent use option (concurrent loans, priced by individual loan)

 Multiple lending models help libraries optimize their collection budgets and meet diverse community needs according to library policies and the anticipated life cycle for a title. Enabling concurrent use for community reading events, for example, with one title while pursuing a metered-access license for trying out new or lesser-known authors enhance our ability to serve our diverse readers. The ALA Joint Digital Content Working Group identified multiple licensing models as a change that can significantly benefit public libraries and readers, and [LC1] this letter to you is an effort to realize this change.

We appreciate that aggregators may only implement multiple lending models if publishers enable these licenses, so we are advocating directly with publishers, as well. Many medium or smaller publishers are amenable, and one of the Big 5 [LC2] is offering multiple models at least until the end of the year. We need both the licensing options and the acquisition platforms to support these options to enable choice for libraries and our readers. Library choice and user-friendly interfaces to access diverse content will be key drivers for determining future investments by public libraries related to digital content.

Thank you for your work with public library leaders to cultivate readers and lifelong learning through your products. We appreciate your consideration and look forward to your reply.

Warm regards,

 Michelle Jeske

PLA President

Kelvin Watson

PLA Board member

ALA DCWG Co-chair

I Love a Parade

As noted by Andrew Albanese in Publishers Weekly, the New York legislature has passed and sent to Governor Cuomo a bill requiring “ ‘publishers who offer to license e-books to the public’ to also offer those e-books to libraries on ‘reasonable’ terms. The bill’s summary states that the law is designed to ensure that ‘widely accepted and effective industry practices remain in place while prohibiting harmful practices that discriminate against libraries and harm library patrons.’ And, also like the Maryland legislation, New York’s bill passed unanimously in the Assembly.

Mr. Albanese notes that the timing of presenting the bill to the governor is not definite, but it looks likely that the bill will be passed into law once it is presented.

ReadersFirst congratulates the New York Library Association for their successful advocacy, including an effective public letter-writing campaign, and thanks the New York legislation for is unanimous support of library readers.

Perhaps even more than the recently passed Maryland law, this development may bring about conversations between individual publishers and libraries. Perhaps one or two will try the recently announced Amazon/DPLA models with a new pricing structure. What would it look like if library digital prices approximated print (or digital audiobook) retail prices? Legislation (and likely soon a law) passed in their backyards may give some of the larger publishers the opportunity to think if the time is right for a new paradigm: not to withhold from libraries in hopes of maximizing profit but to engage more fully with libraries in hopes of maximizing readership. The sales might just follow. Many publishers have pioneered this approach. RF thanks them and encourages readers to explore their content, much of which is worthy buying one’s very own copies.

Maryland and New York are not alone. Rhode Island has legislation pending, while Virginia and Washington librarians seem to be working towards it and Pennsylvania librarians have expressed interest. Of course, it is not librarians who provide the necessary power. It is readers. The people are speaking, and we are grateful that legislators are listening.