To see how that works in the real world, check out "The Anti-Ownership Ebook Economy," a magisterial piece of scholarship from #SarahLamdan, #JasonSchultz, #MichaelWeinberg and #ClaireWoodcock:

https://www.nyuengelberg.org/outputs/the-anti-ownership-ebook-economy/

> Something happened when we shifted to digital formats that created a loss of rights for readers. Pulling back the curtain on the evolution of ebooks offers some clarity to how the shift to digital left ownership behind in the analog world.

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The Anti-Ownership Ebook Economy

Pulling back the curtain on the evolution of ebooks offers some clarity to how the shift to digital left ownership behind in the analog world.

#LoveData23
For Love or Money?
By #SarahLamdan
most impressive talk this week.
book to read Data Cartels.

Sarah Lamdan is a Professor of Law at CUNY School of Law who specializes in information law. Her research and advocacy span the spectrum from public information access to personal data privacy. Sarah Lamdan is also a law librarian with a master's degree in library and information science.

Touches on data brokers like Relx (LexisNexis, scopus, elsevier)

@tutam

"Data Cartels: The Companies that Control and Monopolize Our Information" by Sarah Lamdan, Prof. of Law at CUNY

On the January 4 2023 episode of The Majority Report, Sam Seder interviewed Dr. Lamdan about her recently published book:
https://youtu.be/cKadzImbSJg

The interview starts at the 22:15 mark.

Check out Lamdan's book here: https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=33205&bottom_ref=subject

#SamSeder #majorityreport #SarahLamdan #DataCartel

GOP SPEAKER MELTDOWN; Data Cartels And Our Data w/ Sarah Lamdan | MR LIVE - 1/4/23

YouTube

@jonny Related to that 2FA bit:

"Surveillance capitalism in our libraries " (SWIB21)
Sarah Lamdan, CUNY School of Law

(35m, with slides)

https://yewtu.be/cPImp8cu5BM

#Libraries #Librarians #SWIB21 #SarahLamdan #CUNY #Surveillance #SurveillanceCapitalism

KEYNOTE: Surveillance capitalism in our libraries

KEYNOTE: Surveillance capitalism in our libraries Sarah Lamdan, CUNY School of Law Abstract In the transition from industrial to informational capitalism, much of our lived experience has gone from physical to digital, including library services. As publishers, library vendors, and other informational service providers have become internet-based companies, their business models have transitioned from analog services to data-based services. In short, our traditional library service providers are becoming data analytics companies, dabbling in, or diving into personal data brokering. From RELX to ProQuest, major library vendors are finding new ways to extract and monetize people's personal data. Researchers are finding surveillance software like ThreatMetrix in their research databases, and data analytics companies like Clarivate are trying to acquire ProQuest, a major library service platform provider to exploit library patrons' data to create more academic metrics to sell grant funders and research institutions. All of these corporate decisions are part of a trend of our vendors collecting library patrons' personal data. The increasing surveillance capitalism in our library spaces makes open access more important than ever.