An update on locked-up / “owned” government information: In Honor of National Library Week

Just try to read me on Google Book Search!

Works by the U.S. government are in the public domain* — but are they truly available to the public? Some publishers have managed to lock up public domain materials or have not made them accessible as publicly promised.

Government-created public domain materials have been locked away from the public through contract (Westlaw directly with the government) and through default settings that vary from stated policy (Google Books). An additional complicating factor for public domain government documents is their official status or “citability.” I’ll be discussing all of these factors.

No company should be allowed to hold all of the public domain cards through contracts or licensing agreements when the entire deck of the public domain clearly belongs to the public.

So first with the contract/licensing that keeps public domain materials locked away. The most recent highly publicized incident includes the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) legislative histories, an excellent source of information about the reasoning behind why laws were created the way they were.

Since 1921, the GAO has compiled 20,597 legislative histories of most public laws from 1915-1995. Daniel Cornwall at Free Government Information posts about how GAO entered an agreement to scan these documents

with a commercial partner [West] when the GAO office is within driving distance of a number of major universities and when public-spirited organizations like the Internet Archive and Public Resource might have been happy to come up with a solution to provide this taxpayer-funded information at zero cost to the taxpayers and either zero or minimal costs to GAO. Conceivably, there might have been some way for the Government Printing Office to incorporate this into GPO Access.

In regards to the West contract, several commenters have explained the reasons why this situation is deeply troubling:

Why would the GAO enter into a relationship giving a private commercial entity exclusive rights to this valuable public resource? … As far as I can tell, no one from either the GAO or Thomson West has responded to the concerns raised. Robert J. Ambrogi at Legal Blog Watch

Wholesale privatization without a careful, public examination of other, more citizen-friendly, alternatives is not acceptable. Daniel Cornwall at Free Government Information

Locking up these documents is ‘a cautionary tale for any government agency that wants to leverage its records with the help of private enterprise.’ Simon Fodden at Slaw.ca

Fortunately, “rogue archivist” Carl Malamud has made documents relating to the GAO legislative histories available, including a website/ad that has

[West] go[ing] so far as to boast that you should purchase this exclusive “product” from West because the GAO law librarians (public employees!) have done all the work for you!

Unfortunately, this is far from the only example of a private company locking up public domain materials created by a government agency, due to the value of those materials. For example, the OpenCRS project (and others) attempt to make available Congressional Research Service Reports that as a whole are only available from commercial vendors ( Penny Hill Press, LexisNexis, and CRS documents). We the taxpayers are spending over $100 million a year on the production of these reports by government employees — yet we do not have comprehensive access without paying. The House bill introduced to open these reports to the public, H.R. 2545, has had no action since the date of introduction.

Think about how this bizarre situation has turned public domain on its head – a government employee has created public domain documents, a company has acquired them, and the public now needs to go through that company to see those documents. And if you are a subscriber who has paid for access and then you attempt to download all of those public domain documents to make them publicly available – look out! If you do this, you’ve likely violated your contract / license with the company to access those public domain documents, even though those public domain documents have no copyright protection. The commercial vendor considers the license to trump public domain status.

Now if you think locking up materials with exclusive deals is bad, consider being told that government documents are accessible, yet they are not! A year ago, I posted An Open Letter to Google, William Patry, and Google’s Library Partners regarding the amount of public domain materials that according to Google’s own policies should be available for download.

Some of the documents I discussed that should be available are:

These types of documents are still not available. One of the examples given by the Prelinger Library over two years ago of a document that ironically was not available — was the law itself. The specific version of the copyright law mentioned on the Prelinger blog that was digitized September 2005 from the University of Michigan? Still not available as of today!

U.S. Copyright law — yes, the law itself and government documents regarding it– are still not freely available on Google Books here, here, here , and I could go on. I ironically love the copyrighted material notice on this snippet view of Circular 92 — the Copyright Office’s publication of the law.

Since these documents are in the public domain, yet tied up by Google who can we go to correct this? Obviously, my post last year and the complaints of others didn’t do enough. Last year, in addition to posting, I contacted some of the partner libraries — the response (mentioned here) was it was Google’s responsibility to make those documents downloadable.

Siva Vaidhyanathan has frequently written about the dangers of trusting Google too much (see The Googlization of Everything) including in regards to Google Book Search:

We could solve each of the problems [of difficulty of finding materials in books, exclusivity of research sources, and the public’s unwillingness to use print sources] without Google, although it would take a deep commitment from the public and its institutions to make good information more accessible. … Google’s is still the most ambitious plan, however, and its much bolder venture into the world of print offers us at least three reasons to worry: privacy, privatization, and property.

An additional wrinkle to this already complicated situation is “If government documents are freely available can we trust their accuracy? And can we cite them?”

The American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) last year published a report through on authentication of online state legal resources. The results are startling:

Of the five states (Alaska, Indiana, New Mexico, Tennessee, and Utah) which give official status to their online legal resources, none are authenticated and only Utah requires permanent public access. (emphasis added)

While there are many new upstarts trying to make government information available to all (AltLaw, Precydent, PublicResource), because these new services do not provide government documents that are authenticated or published on a trusted vendor (Lexis or Westlaw), these documents aren’t citable in court filings (due to citation rules). Therefore, attorneys and the public still need to rely on paid services to public domain government documents.

Ian Gallacher has suggested a radical solution to the reliance on paid access to court cases and statutes, stating that law schools collectively take up the mantle of assuring that all of the legal public domain materials are available to all. He admits that this will be a struggle; after all, West fought to have its internal pagination system recognized as copyrightable.

But can we continue to rely on companies to allow access to what belongs to us all? I don’t think that is a safe bet to make. There is nothing wrong with non-profit organizations, government entities, and for-profit companies all having access to these materials. I would not want for-profits to be shut out of the marketplace because they should continue to provide value-added services, such as annotations, unique search functions and organization, and people-written analysis. As Jim Jacobs on Free Government Info states,

“The problem as we see it is that so many agencies seem ignorant of the fact that privatizing access to said digitized public domain information actually limits access in the long run.”

Siva Vaidhyanathan’s statement about Google applies more generally to the present status quo leaving the responsibility for access to public domain materials in the hands of companies:

The process of privatization is particularly troubling. Of course, we should not pretend that libraries operate outside market forces or do not depend on outsourcing many of their functions. But we must recognize that some of the thorniest problems facing libraries today — paying for and maintaining commercial electronic databases and cataloging services — are a direct result of rapid privatization and onerous contract terms. … The long-term risk of privatization is simple: Companies change and fail. Libraries and universities last. Should we entrust our heritage and collective knowledge to a business that has been around for less time than Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston were together? A hundred years from now, Google may well not exist.

For U.S. citizens, it is the responsibility of us all to push to make public domain documents accessible to us and resist privatization of public domain materials.

*Government works created by the U.S. federal government are not protected by copyright; instead these works (with limited exceptions for materials withheld for security, export control, and policy reasons) are in the public domain.

**Bias statement: I use products by Lexis, Westlaw, and Google every day, due to their usefulness to my work and personal life. These companies have a stated responsibility to their shareholders, not to the United States public.

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Comments (6)

[…] recent blog post discusses the interaction between the public domain materials and contracts signed by libraries […]

This issue of locked-up government documents in databases is not limited to the U.S. Eric Ringmar discusses this issue in the London Times:

“Think about this for a second. Here is a company that lays exclusive claim to material produced by the elected representatives of the people. A company whose business idea it is to restrict access to our common heritage. This is upsetting first of all because it goes against the rights of citizens in a democracy to have the documents produced by their parliament freely available. Second, ProQuest is claiming copyright to material whose copyright has long expired. And finally it makes academic research far more difficult. Unless you belong to a university that’s prepared to pay for the stuff, you won’t get to read it.”

http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode=401386&c=1

Hi,

BBC Radio 4 interviewed me about my paper-liberation project. More here: http://web.splashcast.net/go/so/2/p/BVOA1593YS/s/OWWM6184EA/sc/983328/fs/

I hope this will inspire others to start liberating papers.

yours always,

Erik

On June 26, 2008, Public Resource.org has reported the release of scanned legislative history materials, including 10 DVDs of materials, containing 619,481 PDF files by the Government Accountability Office.

In response Public Resource.org, has “proposed an unsolicited joint venture which would allow the GAO to ship to us the same materials they shipped to Thomson West. The cost to the GAO would be minimal, and this valuable resource would see the light of day!”

[…] by r Over the past two years for National Library Week, I have posted about the importance of openness of publication and accessibility of government information and the limitations of relying on Google. Free Government Information, Public.Resource.org, […]

[…] April 16: Over the past two years for National Library Week, I have posted about the importance of openness of publication and accessibility of government information and the limitations of relying on Google. Free Government Information, Public.Resource.org, […]

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