Friday 15 April 2016

copyright - Can I collect meta information on papers and put this online?



For my thesis I have had to go through many different sources to find relevant literature. I want to share my reading list with others to make it easier for people who want to study the same topic to find relevant information. I have set up a little database with meta info (title / journal / author / date / abstract). My idea is to put this online so others can freely browse this. Is there any copyright issue (or otherwise important issue) to take into account? Can I put the abstracts online as well?


Each paper links to the journal's official website and I did not put any actual paper or PDF online.



Answer



With the hopefully obvious caveat that I'm not a lawyer and this is not legal advice: at least in the US, this is probably fine. Copyright law (17 USC § 102) applies to "original works of authorship," not to ideas, and I think everyone would agree the metadata of an article's publication (including journal name, author, and date) fall in the latter category, not the former. Otherwise the whole system of academic citation would be untenable!


The title and abstract, on the other hand, are content created by the articles' authors and are protected by copyright law, but I think it's quite likely that fair use (17 USC § 107) protects you from being held liable for using them in the manner you describe. With reference to the four conditions to be considered when determining fair use:



(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;



You say it's a free, noncommercial endeavor, so that works in your favor




(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;



It's an academic article; the whole purpose of its existence is to be widely disseminated



(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole



The title and abstract are a small part of the work



(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work




Using the title and abstract in a database like this will more likely increase the market for the original paper than decrease it (which is in fact the entire point of having an abstract)




In fact, you would hardly be the first person to do something like this. In high energy physics, INSPIRE already aggregates abstracts and metadata from nearly all published papers.


No comments:

Post a Comment

evolution - Are there any multicellular forms of life which exist without consuming other forms of life in some manner?

The title is the question. If additional specificity is needed I will add clarification here. Are there any multicellular forms of life whic...