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Awards & PrizesJudith Appelbaum to Get BISG Lifetime Award
Judith Appelbaum will be presented with the 2014 Lifetime Service Award at the BISG annual meeting on September 19, 2014 in New York City.
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Religion
Religion Update 2014: What Turns Librarians On—and Off
We don’t deal directly with publishers at all,” says Jarad Millet, who works in collection management at Birmingham Public Library in Alabama.
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Libraries
Check it Out with Michael Kelley: ALA Moves on Legislative Goals
Much of the media coverage of libraries in 2014 to date has centered on the modest progress made on the e-book issue. But 2014 has been a year of significant progress for libraries in the public policy sphere, with a number of library initiatives advancing.
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ConferencesFrankfurt's LitAg Draws Record Numbers for 2014 Fair
Some 308 agencies from 33 countries are booked for the 2014 Frankfurt Book Fair, including 72 U.S. agencies.
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ComicsHow Graphic Are These Novels?
Read with caution: in September, a number of libraries will invite patrons to read comics and graphic novels that have been challenged or banned in schools and public libraries in recent years.
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Content / e-booksJudge Orders Mediation in Latest E-book Price-Fixing Suit
The litigation represents the latest legal front for Apple and the publishers stemming from the 2010 agency switch.
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Content / e-booksBiblioBoard Announces New Partnership Deals
New partners include ePubDirect, Independent Publishers Group, CoreSource and Firebrand Technologies.
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Common CoreCut to the Core: New Standards After Common Core
As students, teachers, and parents across the country gear up for the start of another school year, many are left wondering what the fate of the Common Core will be when they return to their districts.
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Content / e-booksBISG Higher Ed Study Shows Continuing Disruption
New findings from BISG's ongoing survey of student and faculty attitudes show students will pay for solutions that reduce study time, improve outcomes.
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Content / e-booksReport: Libraries Struggling with E-books
U.S libraries have made the most headway with e-books in libraries, but internationally, the situation remains problematic, according to a new report from the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA).
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Content / e-booksCourt Grants Preliminary Approval to Apple Settlement
As expected, Judge Denise Cote granted preliminary approval to a deal that would settle money damages arising from Apple’s e-book price-fixing case.
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Libraries
How E-book Subscription Programs Will Affect Libraries
With the launch of Kindle Unlimited (KU), Amazon’s subscription service, consumer-oriented e-book subscription services are beginning to look like a coming thing.
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Content / e-booksApple Settlement Won’t Be Modified
The parties in the Apple settlement indicated that they would not be modifying the agreement, after a hearing last week in which Judge Cote expressed concerns with the deal.
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Content / e-booksMacmillan Expands Library E-book Lending
Macmillan announced today that it will make its full catalog of frontlist e-book titles available to libraries via its public library e-lending pilot.
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Libraries
The P&L Sheet: Against “Curation”
I knew the word “curate” had successfully shed its musty history—cluttered with Etruscan vases and dioramas of American bison—when I got an email from Brooks Brothers a few years back announcing that it had “carefully curated” a collection of shirts for my consideration.
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Content / e-booksWhat’s Next for the Apple Settlement?
Five core questions about Apple's deal to settle damages in its e-book price-fixing case, including how much consumers can expect to get refunded, and when.
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Content / e-booksJudge on Apple Settlement: Not So Fast
Cote's order suggests she may not be pleased with any unnecessary delay in getting settlement funds to consumers.
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CopyrightConan Doyle Estate Appeals Copyright Case to Supreme Court
The Doyle estate is hoping to overturn two lower court decisions that affirming that the character of Sherlock Homes is in the public domain, in anticipation of a full appeal.
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Content / e-booksApple Could Pay Consumers $400 Million, or Nothing
Under a proposed agreement to settle damages in its e-book price-fixing case, Apple would pay consumers $400 million if Judge Denise Cote's 2013 decision is affirmed on appeal.
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Content / e-booksPrinceton U. Press Partners with Ingram to Digitize Backlist
The Princeton Legacy Library will give new life to over 3,000 out-of-print titles.



