FIRST OPEN ACCESS DAY TO BE HELD OCTOBER 14, 2008
[ Picked text/plain from multipart/alternative ] For immediate release August 28, 2008 For more information, contact: Jennifer McLennan SPARC (202) 296-2296 jennifer@arl.org *FIRST OPEN ACCESS DAY TO BE HELD OCTOBER 14, 2008* Washington, DC =96 August 28, 2008 =96 SPARC (the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition), the Public Library of Science (PLoS), and Students for FreeCulture have jointly announced the first international Ope= n Access Day. Building on the worldwide momentum toward Open Access to publicly funded research, Open Access Day will create a key opportunity for the higher education community and the general public to understand more clearly the opportunities of wider access and use of content. Open Access Day will invite researchers, educators, librarians, students, and the public to participate in live, worldwide broadcasts of events. In North America, events will be held at 7:00 PM (Eastern) and 7:00 PM (Pacific) and feature appearances from: *Sir Richard Roberts, Ph.D., F.R.S.* Joint winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1993 for discovering split genes and RNA splicing, one of 26 Nobel Prize- winners to sign the Open Letter to U.S. Congress in support of taxpayer access to publicly funded research, and currently at New England Biolabs, USA. [7PM Eastern] *Philip E. Bourne, Ph.D. * Philip E. Bourne is the Founding Editor-in-Chief of PLoS Computational Biology and the author of the popular PLoS Computational Biology Ten Simple Rules Series. He is Professor in the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of California San Diego, Associat= e Director of the RCSB Protein Data Bank, Senior Advisor to the San Diego Supercomputer Center, an Adjunct Professor at the Burnham Institute, and Co-Founder of SciVee. [7PM Pacific] Librarians and student organizers are invited to host meetings around the broadcast. To see a list of participating campuses and to sign up, visit th= e Open Access Day Web site at http://www.openaccessday.org. Additional international events will be announced shortly. The event will also mark the launch of the new "Voices of Open Access Video Series." Key members of the research community, including a teacher, librarian, researcher, student, patient advocate, and a funder, will speak on why they are committed to Open Access. "The momentum behind Open Access to research has been accelerating for some time now, even before the mandates at the U.S. National Institutes of Healt= h and Harvard University," said Heather Joseph, Executive Director of SPARC. "Events beyond the U.S. especially underscore the higher education community's commitment to having the access they need. Open Access Day will provide a perfect way for folks to come together, consider, and celebrate the ramifications of the global shift we're experiencing." "Open Access Day is a great opportunity to inform everyone on campus about the nature and importance of Open Access," added Nelson Pavlosky, Co- Founde= r of Students for FreeCulture. "It's really an issue that impacts everyone in the university, whether they are professors who publish, students who research, or librarians who purchase journal subscriptions. Students for FreeCulture looks forward to working with SPARC and PLoS to inform our peers, as well as faculty, staff and administration, about how Open Access can help bring publishing into the 21st Century." "Making full use of the Internet to share and reuse content without restriction is pushing scientific communication into the future," said Pete= r Jerram, CEO of PLoS. "Open Access Day acknowledges the enormous progress that's been made towards comprehensive access to research. We are pleased to be partnering with the community on this special day. We would ask our supporters to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the commencement of our publishing activities in October by participating." Open Access Day was inspired by the National Day of Action on February 15, 2007, led by Students for FreeCulture with support from the Alliance for Taxpayer Access. This year, the same partners have joined forces with PLoS, the Open Access scientific and medical Web publisher. Open Access- supportin= g organizations are also invited to take part. For details, contact the organizers. For details and to participate, visit http://www.openaccessday.org. # *SPARC* SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition), with SPARC Europe and SPARC Japan, is an international alliance of more than 800 academic and research libraries working to create a more open system of scholarly communication. SPARC's advocacy, educational and publisher partnership programs encourage expanded dissemination of research. SPARC i= s a founder of the Alliance for Taxpayer Access, representing taxpayers, patients, physicians, researchers, and institutions that support open publi= c access to taxpayer-funded research. SPARC is on the Web at http://www.arl.org/sparc. *Students for Free Culture (SFC) * Students for FreeCulture is a diverse, non-partisan group of students and young people who are working to get their peers involved in the free cultur= e movement. Launched in April 2004 at Swarthmore College, it has helped establish student groups at colleges and universities across the United States. Today, chapters exist at over 30 colleges, from Maine to California= , with many more getting started around the world. Students for FreeCulture was founded by two Swarthmore students after they sued voting-machine manufacturer Diebold for abusing copyright law in 2003. Named after the boo= k Free Culture by Stanford University law professor Lawrence Lessig, it is part of a growing movement, with roots in the free software/open source community, media activists, creative artists and writers, and civil libertarians. Groups with which it has collaborated include Creative Commons, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, and Downhill Battle. Students for Free Culture is on the Web at http://www.freeculture.org. *PLoS* The Public Library of Science (PLoS) is a non-profit organization of scientists and physicians committed to making the world's scientific and medical literature a freely available public resource. PLoS publishes open access, peer-reviewed journals available online to anyone. PLoS celebrates their fifth anniversary on October 13, 2008. PLoS is on the Web at www.plos.org. -- -------------------------- Jennifer McLennan Director of Communications SPARC (The Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition)http://www.arl.org/sparc ************************** Save the date: The SPARC Digital Repositories Meeting 2008 November 17 18, 2008 | Baltimore, MD ************************** (202) 296-2296 ext 121jennifer@arl.org Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail.
Dear all - Seeing Jeremy Hunsinger's message about "Open Access Day" prompted me to wonder what, if anything, people are doing to celebrate OneWebDay on September 22. For those unfamiliar, OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org) is like Earth Day for the Internet: it was created by Prof. Susan Crawford (now at Michigan Law School) so there would be a single day where everyone across the globe could join together to celebrate the Web, reflect on its role in our lives, and take steps to ensure its survival as a sphere for public discourse, the open flow of ideas, spread of knowledge, fostering of communities, etc, etc. OWD celebrations are planned worldwide for Sept 22 (see http:// www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Main_Page). At our local event in Milwaukee, we're featuring talks on Net Neutrality and Internet Policy Issues; Internet Globalism and Ethics; Ethics, Gaming, and Virtual Worlds; and Privacy, Social Networks, and Online Life. We also plan to have educational kiosks for students to learn how to edit and contribute (constructively) to Wikipedia, as well as how to tweak the privacy settings on their Facebook profiles. (see <http://www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Milwaukee> for more details). What are others doing?? -michael. -- Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Associate, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee e: zimmerm@uwm.edu w: www.michaelzimmer.org
The Imagining the Internet Center at Elon University is partnering with the Greensboro News & Record to invite people to share their personal stories in print and online about how the World Wide Web transforms their lives and communities. Your contributions or your students' contributions could become part of this project, which will also serve as a historic documentation of how individuals say this amazing communication revolution is changing how we live, work and play. It's all part of the recognition of OneWebDay in September. OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org/?page_id=290) is a celebration during which people around the world plan events to promote the importance of an open, globally interoperable Internet and the connectedness and empowerment they achieve online. The News & Record and Imagining the Internet Center are asking people to share written accounts and/or photos and also to consider submitting video clips to YouTube tagged OneWebDay, sending us the URL. We're asking them to tell us how their use of the Internet has made a difference to them personally or in the communities or other groups they belong to. We will compile the responses in a special package in the News & Record and those who submit predictions will have them added to the Imagining the Internet site. An appeal for people's Internet stories ran in the News & Record Op Ed pages August 31: http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/08/29/article/anderson_a_day_to_cele brate_glories_of_the_internet. People are being encouraged to submit their Web stories before Sept. 14; they will be posted and printed in the News & Record on Sept. 21, just before OneWebDay, celebrated annually on Sept. 22. If you or your students would like to share their stories, please have them send their written comments (up to 300 words) to opinion@news-record with a related photo or two. Or have them make a video of up to two minutes, post it on YouTube with OneWebDay as the subject and send an e-mail to ³opinion² to let the News & Record know about it. Thanks! Janna Anderson, from Elon University and Imagining the Internet On 9/5/08 1:18 PM, "Michael Zimmer" <zimmerm@uwm.edu> wrote:
Dear all -
Seeing Jeremy Hunsinger's message about "Open Access Day" prompted me to wonder what, if anything, people are doing to celebrate OneWebDay on September 22.
For those unfamiliar, OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org) is like Earth Day for the Internet: it was created by Prof. Susan Crawford (now at Michigan Law School) so there would be a single day where everyone across the globe could join together to celebrate the Web, reflect on its role in our lives, and take steps to ensure its survival as a sphere for public discourse, the open flow of ideas, spread of knowledge, fostering of communities, etc, etc.
OWD celebrations are planned worldwide for Sept 22 (see http:// www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Main_Page).
At our local event in Milwaukee, we're featuring talks on Net Neutrality and Internet Policy Issues; Internet Globalism and Ethics; Ethics, Gaming, and Virtual Worlds; and Privacy, Social Networks, and Online Life. We also plan to have educational kiosks for students to learn how to edit and contribute (constructively) to Wikipedia, as well as how to tweak the privacy settings on their Facebook profiles. (see <http://www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Milwaukee> for more details).
What are others doing??
-michael.
-- Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Associate, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee e: zimmerm@uwm.edu w: www.michaelzimmer.org
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Down in Melbourne, we're planning an event to communicate the experience of running a wiki-based collaborative environment for the creation and public consultation of Melbourne's ten year plan. (The plan has completed public consultation and is currently being reviewed by City Council for adoption in late Sept.) You can see the wiki plan at: http://www.futuremelbourne.com.au You can see our planned event at (I've pasted in this page's content below): http://www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Melbourne Event The City of Melbourne <http://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/> will host a breakfast event with speakers reporting on the Future Melbourne<http://www.futuremelbourne.com.au/>project. The breakfast will be aimed at communicating Future Melbourne's extraordinary experience in the adoption of a wiki-based environment for the mass collaborative development of the City's plan, including a one month long, open access public consultation. Invitees will include Local and State Government representatives, Future Melbourne project partners, stakeholders, and urban planning consultants responsible for community consultation. The consultation period for Future Melbourne ran from 17 May - 14 June 2008. As part of this period of public participation, the City of Melbourne hosted a wiki where members of the public from anywhere in the world could register and directly edit the draft plan. The site received over 30,000 page views by nearly 7000 individuals, and over 200 individual edits were undertaken to the plan. Topics - The wiki advantage: From consultation to participation. - Future democracy? Public participation in city planning via online technologies eg. Future Melbourne <http://www.futuremelbourne.com.au/>wiki. - Trends and challenges in deploying online collaborative technologies. - How we fared: The results from the Future Melbourne<http://www.futuremelbourne.com.au/>consultation period. Participants - Welcome Speech: Cr. Catherine Ng (Confirmed) - MC: Andrew Gill (Confirmed) - Dr. Mark Alan Elliott of Collabforge <http://collabforge.net/>(Confirmed) - Panellists: - Geoff Lawler, Director Sustainability and Regulatory Services, City of Melbourne (Confirmed) - Dr. Mark Alan Elliott of Collabforge <http://collabforge.net/>(Confirmed) - Paul Rees-Jones, Manager Planning & Insights, Clemenger BBDO<http://www.clemengerbbdo.com.au/bbdo.asp>(Confirmed) Attendees Local and State Government representatives, Future Melbourne project partners, stakeholders, and urban planning consultants responsible for community consultation. Details - Date: Monday, September 22, 2008 - Time: 7.30am for 7.45am to 9.15am. - Location: Level 89, Eureka Tower <http://www.eureka89.com.au/> - Address: Level 89 Eureka Tower, 7 Riverside Quay, Southbank, Melbourne - Capacity: 120 - Cost: Free (Invite only) Contact Name: Sarah Lowcock - sarlow AT melbourne.vic.gov.au Phone: +61 3 9658 9905 On Sat, Sep 6, 2008 at 3:35 AM, Janna Anderson <andersj@elon.edu> wrote:
The Imagining the Internet Center at Elon University is partnering with the Greensboro News & Record to invite people to share their personal stories in print and online about how the World Wide Web transforms their lives and communities. Your contributions or your students' contributions could become part of this project, which will also serve as a historic documentation of how individuals say this amazing communication revolution is changing how we live, work and play.
It's all part of the recognition of OneWebDay in September. OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org/?page_id=290) is a celebration during which people around the world plan events to promote the importance of an open, globally interoperable Internet and the connectedness and empowerment they achieve online. The News & Record and Imagining the Internet Center are asking people to share written accounts and/or photos and also to consider submitting video clips to YouTube tagged OneWebDay, sending us the URL. We're asking them to tell us how their use of the Internet has made a difference to them personally or in the communities or other groups they belong to. We will compile the responses in a special package in the News & Record and those who submit predictions will have them added to the Imagining the Internet site.
An appeal for people's Internet stories ran in the News & Record Op Ed pages August 31:
http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/08/29/article/anderson_a_day_to_cele brate_glories_of_the_internet.
People are being encouraged to submit their Web stories before Sept. 14; they will be posted and printed in the News & Record on Sept. 21, just before OneWebDay, celebrated annually on Sept. 22.
If you or your students would like to share their stories, please have them send their written comments (up to 300 words) to opinion@news-record with a related photo or two. Or have them make a video of up to two minutes, post it on YouTube with OneWebDay as the subject and send an e-mail to ³opinion² to let the News & Record know about it.
Thanks! Janna Anderson, from Elon University and Imagining the Internet
On 9/5/08 1:18 PM, "Michael Zimmer" <zimmerm@uwm.edu> wrote:
Dear all -
Seeing Jeremy Hunsinger's message about "Open Access Day" prompted me to wonder what, if anything, people are doing to celebrate OneWebDay on September 22.
For those unfamiliar, OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org) is like Earth Day for the Internet: it was created by Prof. Susan Crawford (now at Michigan Law School) so there would be a single day where everyone across the globe could join together to celebrate the Web, reflect on its role in our lives, and take steps to ensure its survival as a sphere for public discourse, the open flow of ideas, spread of knowledge, fostering of communities, etc, etc.
OWD celebrations are planned worldwide for Sept 22 (see http:// www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Main_Page).
At our local event in Milwaukee, we're featuring talks on Net Neutrality and Internet Policy Issues; Internet Globalism and Ethics; Ethics, Gaming, and Virtual Worlds; and Privacy, Social Networks, and Online Life. We also plan to have educational kiosks for students to learn how to edit and contribute (constructively) to Wikipedia, as well as how to tweak the privacy settings on their Facebook profiles. (see <http://www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Milwaukee> for more details).
What are others doing??
-michael.
-- Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Associate, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee e: zimmerm@uwm.edu w: www.michaelzimmer.org
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- ----- Mark Elliott, PhD Director, CollabForge pty ltd collaboration ~ mass collaboration ~ social software http://collabforge.com ~ http://mark-elliott.net/ ~ http://metacollab.net/
participants (4)
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Janna Anderson -
jeremy hunsinger -
Mark Elliott -
Michael Zimmer