Lack of demand, particularly since many catalogs contain a lot of garbage 
metadata and/or resources that others cannot access. Plus, the information goes 
stale quickly. Not that there's no use for this information, but not that many 
people are asking.

Also, despite declarations to wanting to make info open, library organizations 
are much better at giving away other peoples' information than their own. A 
huge percentage of librarians work at public expense, but if you do anything 
for ALA or a number of other library outfits, copyright notices and other 
restrictions competitive with the publishers we love to whine about get slapped 
on mighty fast. 

Kyle


> On Apr 29, 2014, at 1:02 PM, Laura Krier <laura.kr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Code4Libbers,
> 
> I'd like to find out from as many people as are interested what barriers
> you feel exist right now to you releasing your library's bibliographic
> metadata openly. I'm curious about all kinds of barriers: technical,
> political, financial, cultural. Even if it seems obvious, I'd like to hear
> about it.
> 
> Thanks in advance for your feedback! You can send it to me privately if
> you'd prefer.
> 
> Laura
> 
> -- 
> Laura Krier
> 
> laurapants.com<http://laurapants.com/?utm_source=email_sig&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=email>

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