Frank, A similar observation of mine is that the same can be said when documents that arrive in libraries on CD ... that they are containers. The preference seems to be to catalog round disks rather than offload and print contents (when it can be done). A preservation concern, however, might be the expected life expectancy of paper over plastic. Bob Dowd Senior Librarian Documents Section New York State Library Cultural Education Center Empire State Plaza Albany, NY 12230 (518) 474-8846 rdowd@mail.nysed.gov >>> "Sadowski, Frank" <fsadowski@LIBRARY.ROCHESTER.EDU> 9/25/2008 9:13 AM >>> Lori, I've been withholding comment till now, being certain that someone would mention the fact that the flash drive is merely the container, and a temporary one at that. I've been trying to come up with a parallel, and the best I can do is to think of a boxed set of a video series. Is it the box that's copyrighted or the discs within? In the case of your flash drive, you have the rights to the contents, and the drive itself merely serves as a means of transmitting the contents. The obvious thing to me is to copy the contents of the flash drive to your library server (and Iowa State undoubtedly has one, yes?) and recycle the flash drive as you see fit. I am also certain that copyright allows you to make a backup archival copy without any legal problems. ------------------------- Frank E. Sadowski Jr. Principal Cataloger River Campus Libraries University of Rochester Rochester, NY 14627-0055 (585) 275-4496 fsadowski@library.rochester.edu -----Original Message----- From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of Kappmeyer, Lori O [LIB] Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2008 5:19 PM To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Cataloging a flash drive Thank you all for your comments on how to handle this flash drive. Thanks, Marie, for pointing out that this was discussed before on SERIALST, so now I went to the archives and looked at those messages, too. I think when I saw those messages earlier I deleted them thinking I would probably not have to deal with that situation. I enjoyed the accidental message about this from Jane, because I have thought the same thing sometimes. As someone mentioned, the flash drive is not write-protected, so anyone can delete its contents or add to it, and the contents are not protected if it is circulated. Many of the people who commented on SERIALST and AUTOCAT indicated that their libraries are printing and binding this. We considered this, but lately we have been re-examining whether we should be printing and retaining PDFs of copyrighted material. We also considered copying it to a CD-ROM, but this results in similar problems with copyright. Another option is to put it in an institutional repository, but we don't have one yet. We learned that this is available online, through the organization's web site, although we can't tell that there is any guarantee that it will be available online long-term. The subject selector who wanted to keep the flash drive didn't know the information was available online. When she learned this, she was agreeable to adding the URLs of the online version to our serials cataloging records for the abstracts and program, instead of cataloging the flash drive. So that is how we will handle this one, although we may regret it later if the online access disappears. Thanks again for all your help! Lori Osmus Kappmeyer Head, Cataloging & Metadata Department Iowa State University Library Ames, IA 50011 -----Original Message----- From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU] On Behalf Of Marie Peterson Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 11:10 AM To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Cataloging a flash drive We also received this flash drive. After consulting with the subject selector, we printed the files, had them bound (pamphlet binding) in-house in our Preservation Department, and added them to the print record. There was some discussion about this on the Serials list a couple of months ago, when the flash drives first starting arriving in various libraries. Marie Peterson, M.L.S. Technical Services Associate Continuing Resources/CTS 134 Lockwood Library SUNY University at Buffalo Buffalo, NY 14260-2210 > -----Original Message----- > From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum > [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of Kappmeyer, Lori O [LIB] > Sent: Monday, September 22, 2008 2:45 PM > To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU > Subject: [SERIALST] Cataloging a flash drive > > Recently we received a flash drive that came on our subscription to the > Journal of Great Lakes Research. The flash drive contains two pdf > files, one for the abstracts and one for the program of the 51st annual > Conference on Great Lakes Research in May 2008. A half-sheet of paper > accompanying the flash drive said that this was a "green initiative" to > reduce paper at the annual conference. Up until now, the program and > abstracts have been published in paper. In the recent past, we have > cataloged the program as a serial and the abstracts as another serial. > > =20 > > We think we will be keeping the flash drive and housing it in our media > collection with other kinds of accompanying software. Has anyone ever > cataloged a flash drive, or do you have any suggestions for how to do > it? As an alternative, someone suggested we could print off the PDFs > and catalog and bind them. What would you do? > > =20 > > Thanks for any advice! > > =20 > > Lori Osmus Kappmeyer > > Head, Cataloging & Metadata Department > > Iowa State University Library > > Ames, IA 50011 > > =20 > > ------------------------------