---------- Forwarded message ----------
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2001 13:09:47 -0400
From: Peter Suber <pet...@earlham.edu>
To: suber-...@topica.com
Subject:      Re: FOS Newsletter Excerpts

      Welcome to the Free Online Scholarship (FOS) Newsletter
      October 12, 2001


Journal editors resign to protest publisher's policies

Forty editors of the _Machine Learning Journal_ (MLJ) have resigned from 
the editorial board and published their reasons in a public letter dated 
October 8.  The MLJ editors were frustrated by the reluctance of Kluwer, 
their publisher, to adapt the journal to the digital age.  They asked 
Kluwer to lower the subscription price and provide free online access to 
the articles.  Without these changes, the subscription price limited access 
to the very researchers whom the journal ought to serve.

Quoting the public letter:  "While these [subscription] fees provide access 
for institutions and individuals who can afford them, we feel that they 
also have the effect of limiting contact between the current machine 
learning community and the potentially much larger community of researchers 
worldwide whose participation in our field should be the fruit of the 
modern Internet."

Kluwer agreed to lower the individual subscription price (to $120) but 
would not lower the institutional price (at $1,050) or provide free online 
access to the articles.

Leslie Pack Kaelbling resigned as one of MLJ's action editors and began 
looking for a publisher willing to host a journal on machine learning more 
in keeping with her vision of wide and free online access.  She struck a 
remarkable deal with MIT Press.  She would launch a new journal, the 
_Journal of Machine Language Research_ (JMLR) which would provide free 
online access to all its articles and publish them online as soon as they 
were accepted.  Quarterly, MIT would publish a print edition at a 
reasonable subscription price.  MIT brought in the Scholarly Publishing and 
Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) to use its international network of 
member libraries to guarantee an adequate subscription base for the new 
journal.  Finally, JMLR would leave copyrights in the hands of 
authors.  MIT would only have the right of first print publication and the 
right of first refusal on anthologies of JMLR articles.  MIT agreed, in 
effect, not to own the journal or its contents, but only to publish the 
print edition.  No money changes hands between JMLR and MIT.

MIT can agree to these terms in part because JMLR editors keep costs down 
by providing online- and print-ready copy in PDF format.  MIT is also 
willing to experiment with new ways of doing business in the digital age.

Once JMLR was in the cards, Leslie invited all the MLJ editors to join her 
at the new journal, without necessarily resigning from MLJ.  All but a 
handful chose to resign and join her.  Some are editors at both 
journals.  While the 40 resignations have taken place over the past nine 
months, the 40 agreed only recently to publish a joint, signed open 
letter.  Their purpose was to describe their grievance with Kluwer and to 
explain to the world that JMLR is not the raw newcomer that it might 
otherwise appear to be.  Hiring and tenure committees should understand 
that JMLR is the leading journal in the field of machine learning, even if 
its citation history and impact factor have not had time to reflect the 
eminence and experience of its editorial board.

Thanks to Leslie Pack Kaelbling for sharing these details with me in an 
interview on October 9.

Public letter of resignation (October 8, 2001)
http://www.cs.orst.edu/~dambrosi/uai-archive/0822.html

[old journal] Machine Learning (aka Machine Learning Journal)
http://www.wkap.nl/journalhome.htm/0885-6125

[new journal] Journal of Machine Learning Research
http://www.jmlr.org

SPARC home page
http://www.arl.org/sparc/

* Postscript.  This should remind you of November 1999 when the entire 
editorial board of the _Journal of Logic Programming_ (published by 
Elsevier) resigned and created the _Theory and Practice of Logic 
Programming_ (published by Cambridge).  See FOSN for 5/11/01.
http://www.topica.com/lists/suber-fos/read/message.html?mid=1602797702&sort=d&start=0

It should also remind you of the 1998 decision by Michael Rosenzweig and 
the rest of his editorial board to resign from _Evolutionary Ecology_, 
which Rosenzweig had launched in 1986, in order to create _Evolutionary 
Ecology Research_.   Are there are other, similar stories that belong on 
this short list?
http://www.arl.org/create/resources/stories.html#eer

----------

Will FOS do harm?  More harm than good?

In the October 12 _Chronicle of Higher Education_, John Ewing argues 
against a thoughtless rush into FOS.  His most specific reason for caution 
is that small independent publishers have the thinnest profit margins and 
will be the first to fail in competition with FOS.  If they fail, 
publishing will be dominated even more than now by a narrow band of 
profitable giants charging high prices.  Richard Kaser made a similar 
argument in his September 18 contribution to the _Nature_ debate on FOS 
(see FOSN for 9/21/01).  Arthur Smith points out in our discussion forum 
that he made a similar argument in 1998.  Here are some thoughts on Ewing's 
version of the argument.

Priced journals cannot compete with free journals, when the two sets are 
roughly equal in significance and quality.  If FOS journals gain the 
readership and recognition to wipe out priced journals from small, 
independent publishers, then they will a foothold to threaten the journals 
from the profitable giant publishers as well, even if the giants have a 
thicker armor of savings to postpone the inevitable.  If the big publishers 
eventually fail or retreat from the journal market, then it's simply not 
true that FOS will cause big publishers to dominate the journal 
market.  The worst-case scenario is not the dominance of giant publishers, 
but a temporary period in which the giants coexist with free journals.

But in fact, there is no evidence that FOS would hurt small, independent 
publishers before large ones.  In a market of expensive, inexpensive, and 
free journals, again assuming comparable significance and quality, there is 
good reason to believe that libraries will drop the expensive journals 
first and retain the affordable and free ones as long as possible.  If so, 
then big publishers will suffer first, not last.

Is it fair to assume that free and priced journals can be equals in 
significance and quality?  Ewing doesn't argue to the contrary but others 
have.  The short reply to this objection is that significance and quality 
depend on the editors and authors, not on the marketing, medium, or 
imprint.  Not only can free journals have editors and authors comparable to 
those at the best print journals, they can have the very same editors and 
authors.  It's true that it takes time for prestige and reputation to catch 
up with quality, but the lag time is getting shorter as librarians work 
together to boost inexpensive new journals and as a new generation of 
academics understands that the medium is not the message.

Ewing doesn't pretend to know the future and I don't either.  If his 
predictions and mine are both taken with a grain of salt, then it remains 
the case that his scenario is a risk that we can avoid only with 
caution.  I accept this.  The only problem lies in his implication that 
some FOS advocates, or journals, or publishers, or scholars are 
thoughtlessly rushing fundamental change.  Some calls for FOS may be less 
cognizant of the obstacles than others, and some FOS projects may 
fail.  But let's be clear:  no one is rushing the change of the conditions 
of journal competition.  Rushing deep changes of this kind is 
impossible.  Richard Kaser, in his version of the argument, worries that we 
will "trade in" a journal system that works acceptably for one that may 
not.  Both arguments assume that FOS could replace the current journal 
system suddenly, or before we adequately understand what is happening.  But 
this is far-fetched.  FOS is emerging gradually, one journal or archive at 
a time.  The slow pace of change provides all the time for measurement and 
reflection that caution requires.  We certainly have time to monitor the 
effects of FOS as it grows.  Those who worry about harmful consequences can 
help the cause of scholarly communication by looking to see whether feared 
forms of harm are materializing.  By all means warn us of risks that others 
didn't see or heed.  But don't pretend that we can't monitor our own 
experiment and make mid-course corrections.

Finally, Ewing argues that free online journals lack a good business 
model.  Volunteer labor and government support may both 
disappear.  True.  But there are many other business models than these to 
examine, including author fees, university funds, print sales, and 
endowments.  It's true that none of these has yet proved itself for free 
online journals over the long term.  But Ewing's argument assumes that the 
currently prevailing business plan works.  It doesn't.  Currently, authors 
of journal articles donate their professional labor and intellectual 
property to the dissemination system.  In this system, publishers stand 
between authors and readers, charge for access, and keep the 
money.  Subscription fees limit readers' access to literature and limit 
authors' access to readers.  This obstructs both research and 
education.  It might be acceptable if publishers had to stand between 
authors and readers in order to disseminate the literature and if they 
charged reasonable subscription prices.  But neither is true.  The internet 
makes most functions of traditional journal publishers unnecessary.  To 
continue to pay for these functions at the expense of reader access and 
author impact is perverse.  Moreover, in the last decade journal 
subscription prices have risen faster than inflation, faster even than 
health care prices.  This causes libraries to cancel important journals 
every year, which only aggravates the harm to research and education.  It 
is precisely the failure of the present business model that has stimulated 
the current, healthy experimentation with other business models.

John H. Ewing, No Free Lunches: We Should Resist the Push to Rush Research 
Online
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v48/i07/07b01401.htm

Richard Kaser, When allegory replaces rational thought, science had better 
watch out
http://www.nature.com/nature/debates/e-access/Articles/kaser.html

Arthur Smith, August 28, 1998 posting to the _AmSci_ forum
http://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind98&L=september98-forum&F=l&S=&P=3892

Discussion thread on Ewing's article in the September98Forum
http://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A1=ind01&L=september98-forum&F=l#92
(Particularly good on Ewing's argument that FOS journals lack "frills".)

What do you think?  Post your thoughts to the FOS discussion forum.
http://www.topica.com/lists/fos-forum/read
(Anyone may read; only subscribers may post; subscription is free.)

----------

Developments

* On October 10, the International eBook Award Foundation announced the 
second annual Frankfurt eBook Awards.  The top two prizes in non-fiction 
went to Steven Levy's _Crypto_ and Eric Nisenson's biography of Miles 
Davis.  There is no special category for academic or scholarly 
non-fiction.  It appears that all the winning ebooks were simultaneously 
published in print.
http://www.iebaf.org/pi.asp

* The California Digital Library (CDL) and Berkeley Electronic Press 
(bepress) have become partners.  Bepress has developed software tools to 
facilitate the creation, editing, and management of free online 
journals.  Under the new agreement, CDL will make these tools available to 
researchers at the University of California.  Because the bepress tools 
work with eprints.org software, we should soon see some new free online 
journals and OAI-compliant archives from California departments and 
research centers.
http://www.bepress.com/press.html

* Adobe Systems has announced that it will use Info2clear technology to 
improve the security of PDF ebooks.  The press release doesn't say so, but 
this is presumably a response to Dmitri Sklyarov's proof that existing PDF 
ebook security can be broken.
http://www.onlinepublishingnews.com/htm/n20011008.046928.htm

* Adobe has also announced an international version of its ebook 
reader.  It is supposed to be the only ebook reader for books in German, 
French, or Spanish that runs on both the Mac and Windows.
http://www.content-wire.com/Home/Index.cfm?ccs=86&cs=851

* Collection EgoDocuments of Montpellier has announced what it calls the 
world's first free, continuously edited, web-passive ebook, an online 
edition of _Le Journal du chevalier Marie Daniel Bourrée de Corberon_, 
originally published in Paris 1776-1781.  "Web-passive" here simply means 
non-interactive.  The editors plan to make a future edition the book 
interactive, drawing on a database to answer user questions about Bourrée 
de Corberon's life and travels.  The present edition has a very useful set 
of links from the text to explanatory notes and images of people or places 
mentioned in the text.  The boast that the book is "continuously edited" 
apparently means that new links of this kind are continuously being added.
http://melior.univ-montp3.fr/eol/egoDoc/Corberon/PageAccueil.htm
(Thanks to Ellen Fernandez-Sacco for bringing this to my attention.)

* OCLC has announced that WorldCat now has more than 500,000 records for 
digital resources --out of 48 million records for print and digital 
resources combined.
http://www.oclc.org/oclc/press/20011004.shtm

* The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) has approved the Dublin 
Core Metadata Element Set.
http://listserv.nlc-bnc.ca/cgi-bin/ifla-lwgate.pl/DIGLIB/archives/diglib.log0110/date/article-23.html
(The announcement has not yet appeared on the ANSI, NISO, or DMCI sites.)

The approved metadata element set is online here.
http://www.techstreet.com/cgi-bin/detail?product_id=926135

* Can free online access be *too* accessible?  Federal law requires that 
criminal records be publicly available.  Before the digital age this meant 
that they were available to anyone willing to visit the courthouse and 
riffle through paper files.  In the digital age it meant free online 
access.  But recently the federal government decided to remove criminal 
records from the internet in the name of privacy.  The question whether 
free online access is excessive even for public documents has also come up 
with voter registration records, bankruptcy records, and the financial 
disclosures of public officials.  (PS:  These are nice examples of 
quantitative changes that become qualitative changes.  For scholarship, we 
welcome the qualitative changes that come with quantitative increases in 
speed and ease of access.  But for criminal and voting records, is the 
qualitative change undesirable or just unsettling?  Must we have two 
categories from now on, "publicly available with ease" and "publicly 
available with difficulty"?)
http://www.nando.net/technology/story/130856p-1361106c.html

----------

New on the net

* The National Security Archive (NSA) has launched a free online series of 
September 11th Source Books.  The NSA is a non-governmental non-profit 
organization with a two million page archive of other security documents 
dating back to 1985.  Its new September 11th Source Books consist of 
primary source documents which it has obtained from the government through 
the Freedom of Information Act.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB55/index1.html

* The Open Language Archives Community (OLAC) is a newly created 
international organization of institutions and individuals assembling a 
free online OAI-compliant archive of resources on language and 
linguistics.  The archive will officially launch in January 2002.
http://www.language-archives.org/

* The U.S. Department of Energy has launched the Energy Citations Database, 
a free online archive of bibliographic citations to federally sponsored 
scientific research on energy.  In a small but growing number of cases, the 
citations include links to free online full-text.
http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/

* The government of Australia has launched a free online archive of 
Australian science and industry information.  This supplements its earlier 
archives on Australian agriculture, business, and culture.
http://www.scienceandindustry.gov.au/

* The American Association for the Advancement of Science and Science 
magazine have launched a free online archive on the science of aging, the 
Science of Aging Knowledge Environment (SAGE KE).
http://sageke.sciencemag.org/

* The Johns Hopkins medical school with support from the Sloan and Wood 
Foundations has launched a Center for Civilian Biodefense Studies.  In 
addition to providing news and conferences, it hosts a small but presumably 
growing online archive of published articles on relevant scientific topics.
http://www.hopkins-biodefense.org/

* Sabawoon Online has launched Afghanpedia, a comprehensive free online 
guide to the history and geography of Afghanistan.
http://www.sabawoon.com/afghanpedia/default.shtm

* The proceedings of the June conference in Amsterdam, Change and 
Continuity in Scientific Communication, are now online.
http://www.niwi.knaw.nl/ccsc/grid.htm

* In August a group of individuals and organizations responding to a public 
invitation launched the BioMed Archives Consortium in a meeting at MIT 
Press.  The plan is to provide online access to biomedical research.  The 
archive plans to support itself by charging institutional subscriptions.
http://www.biomedarchives.org

----------

Share your thoughts

* The U.S. government has decided that the internet isn't secure enough for 
its critical and classified communications.  Richard Clarke, the new 
presidential advisor for Cyberspace Security, has proposed the creation of 
an alternative network called GovNet.  The General Services Administration 
is asking the private sector to make suggestions on how to implement GovNet 
so that it meets its specs, and even to bid on its construction and 
maintenance.  Public comments and submissions will be welcome until 
November 21.
http://www.fts.gsa.gov/govnet/govnet.doc

Postscript.  Here's hoping that this has no FOS implications.  Right now 
the federal government is one of the most generous providers of free online 
scientific and cultural content.  As proposed, GovNet will handle only 
other sorts of data.  But we know that the military experiences 
"classification creep" and that some government agencies have already 
deleted scientific information from their web sites, thinking it to be 
helpful to terrorists (see FOSN for 10/5/01).  Any content that migrates 
from the public internet to the new GovNet will cease to be accessible to 
researchers, teachers, and students.

* If you think you've missed some Requests for Comments (RFC's) for 
internet standards and protocols, check out the free quarterly, _RFC 
Sourcebook_.  The current issue covers July-September, 2001.
http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/default0303.htm

----------

In other publications

* In the October 10 _USA Today_, Edward Baig criticizes digital 
encyclopedias that force students seeking information to wade through 
advertisements or even sign up for commercial services in order to get it.
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20011010/3525388s.htm

* The October 9 _Library Journal_ has a brief, two-paragraph report on the 
Forum on Publishing Alternatives in Science held at the Johns Hopkins 
medical school on October 1.  One statistic revealed at the forum:  between 
1986 and 1999, the consumer price index rose 49%, the cost of health care 
rose 111%, and the cost of scholarly journals rose 175%.  During the same 
period the number of scholarly journals increased only 55%.  (PS:  Did any 
FOSN readers attend this forum?  I'd like to see a more detailed report.)
http://libraryjournal.reviewsnews.com/index.asp?layout=article&articleid=CA170884&display=breakingNews
(Free registration required.)

* In the October _EContent_, Sylvia Lacock Marino describes Discussion 
Miner, new software to read online discussion groups, summarize them, and 
package the summaries to sell to advertisers who want the latest dope on 
the zeitgeist.  I once read about a financial version that crunched through 
stock trading discussion groups in order to summarize investor beliefs in 
real time.  This was based on the plausible theory that the stock market 
goes up and down according to people's beliefs about whether it will go up 
and down.  Would an academic version be useful only to social scientists 
doing field work on academic communities?  Or could you get useful 
meta-analysis from the distillation of academic chat?
http://www.econtentmag.com/Magazine/Features/marino10_01.html

* In an October posting to _GigaLaw_, Bob Pimm reviews current U.S. law to 
summarize what rights are held, and not held, by authors of ebooks.
http://www.gigalaw.com/articles/pimm-2000-10-p1.html

* In another October posting to _GigaLaw, Doug Isenberg analyzes the DMCA's 
anti-circumvention clause and some of its lesser known provisions.
http://www.gigalaw.com/articles/2001/isenberg-2001-10-p1.html

* In the September issue of _Ariadne_, Susi Woodhouse describes the UK's 
People's Network and the New Opportunities Fund's program to digitize 
academic content.
http://www.nof-digitise.org/

* Also in the September _Ariadne_, John MacColl summarizes some of the 
presentations at a June ACM/IEEE meeting in Roanake on digital libraries.
http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue29/maccoll/

* Also in the September _Ariadne_, John MacColl, Marieke Napier, and Philip 
Hunter summarize each presentation at a July meeting in London to find ways 
for JISC to help advance the cause of OAI.
http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue29/open-archives/

* In September, the JISC/DNER E-Book Working Group posted its paper on 
strategy and issues, written by Hazel Woodward and Louise Edwards, to the 
web.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/dner/ebooks/strategy1.html

* In the August issue of the _Journal of Digital Information_, David Miall 
and Teresa Dobson summarize research suggesting that readers are less able 
to concentrate and reflect when reading hypertext than when reading text 
without hyperlinks.
http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/Articles/v02/i01/Miall/

----------

Catching up

* In April 2000, Ray Siemens and colleagues undertook a study of the use, 
perception, and credibility of electronic journals in Canada.  They based 
their analysis on published literature in North America and Europe and on 
questionnaires they sent to scholars, publishers, and university 
administrators.  Their reports are now online.

Ray Siemens, Introduction and overview
http://web.mala.bc.ca/hssfc/Final/overview.htm

Jean-Claude Guédon, Peer review and imprint
http://web.mala.bc.ca/hssfc/Final/PeerReview.htm

Michael Best and Elizabeth Grove-White, Copyright issues
http://web.mala.bc.ca/hssfc/Final/Copyright.htm

Alan Burk, James Kerr, and Andy Pope, Archiving and Text Fluidity / Version 
Control
http://web.mala.bc.ca/hssfc/Final/Archiving.htm

* Jean-Claude Guédon's historical perspective on the digital revolution in 
scholarly publishing, and the commercial counter-revolution, is now 
online.  He concludes with five reasons to support the Open Archives 
Initiative and a call to librarians to play a central role in the 
continuing revolution.  The paper is a revised and enlarged version of a 
talk originally given at ARL's Creating the Digital Future Conference in 
Toronto in May.
http://www.arl.org/arl/proceedings/138/guedon.html

----------

Following up

* The URL I published last week for Audiobooksforfree.com worked when I 
wrote my article on it but didn't work the day I mailed the issue.  The 
site is getting more than two million hits per month and its database 
engine cannot handle the traffic.  The URL is not dead, just periodically 
dormant.  The company promises better service in three or four weeks.
http://www.audiobooksforfree.com/

* In the last issue I described the self-censorship practiced by several 
government agencies and private organizations.  In the October 9 _Search 
Day_, Chris Sherman reminds these agencies that much of scientific 
information they deleted because it might be useful to terrorists is cached 
by Google for all to retrieve and use.
http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/01/sd1009-google-cache.html

----------

Topica.com, the email host for this newsletter, will be down for 
maintenance for 24-26 hours starting tomorrow, October 13, at 8:00 am PDT 
(4:00 pm GMT).  If you visit the site e.g. to search or read back issues, 
don't be deterred by the "Under Maintenance" message.  Just come back 
later.  Sorry for the inconvenience.
http://www.topica.com/lists/suber-fos/read

----------

Conferences

If you plan to attend one of the following conferences, please share your 
observations with us through our discussion forum.

* IT in the Transformation of the Library
http://www.lita.org/forum01/index.htm
Milwaukee, October 11-14

* Collections & Access for the 21st Century Scholar:  A Forum to Explore 
the Roles of the Research Library
http://www.arl.org/forum/index.html
Washington, D.C., October 19-20

* Intellectual Property Rights in the Knowledge-Based Economy
http://ip.nationalacademies.org/calendar.php?id=94
Washington, D.C., October 22

* International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications 2001
http://www.nii.ac.jp/dc2001/
Tokyo, October 22-26

* e-Book Lessons:  From Life-Cycle to User Experiences
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 23

* Fourth Meeting of the [NAS] Committee on Intellectual Property Rights 
(only parts are open to the public)
http://ip.nationalacademies.org/calendar.php?id=322
Washington, D.C., October 23-24

* Copyright Issues in the Electronic Age
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 29

* Paperless Publishing:  Peer Review, Production, and Publication
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Washington, D.C., October 30

* The XML Revolution:  What Scholarly Publishers Need to know
http://www.sspnet.org/public/articles/details.cfm?id=181
Waltham, Massachusetts, November 1

* Information in a Networked World:  Harnessing the Flow
http://www.asis.org/Conferences/AM01/index.html
Washington D.C., November 2-8

* Electronic Book 2001:  Authors, Applications, and Accessibility
http://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/ebook2001/
Washington D.C., November 5-7

* Content Summit 01:  Funding opportunities for European digital content on 
global networks
http://www.contentsummit.com/
Zurich, November 7-9

* Internet Librarian 2001
http://www.infotoday.com/il2001/
Pasadena, November 6-8

* Setting Standards and Making it Real (on Digital Reference Services)
http://vrd.org/conferences/VRD2001/program.shtml
Orlando, November 12-13

* First Annual Meeting of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium
http://www.tei-c.org/Publicity/pisa.html
Pisa, November 16-17

* ARL Workshop for Publishers:  Licensing Electronic Resources to 
Libraries:  Understanding Your Market
http://www.arl.org/scomm/licensing/pworkshop.html
Philadelphia, November 19

* European Forum on Harmful and Illegal Cyber Content
http://www.humanrights.coe.int/media/cyberforum/main.htm
Strasbourg, November 28

* Digital Media Revolution in the Americas
http://www.iamericas.org/events/eventlist.html
Pasadena, November 29 - December 1

* 4th International Conference of Asian Digital Libraries
http://www.icadl2001.org/
Bangalore, December 10-12

----------

The Free Online Scholarship Newsletter is supported by a grant from the 
Open Society Institute.
http://www.soros.org/osi.html

==========

This is the Free Online Scholarship Newsletter (ISSN 1535-7848).

Please feel free to forward any issue of the newsletter to interested 
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Guide to the FOS Movement
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/guide.htm

Peter Suber
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters

Copyright (c) 2001, Peter Suber
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/copyrite.htm

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