Hello, colleagues. If any of you is on the LIB-LICENSE listserv, you'll
find that many librarians are confused about what training AI means, how
fair use fits in, and what is needed from e-Resource license agreements to
protect scholars' TDM and AI rights. Building on our submission to the
Copyright Office
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nNvynoekNREUhLA_h5AqE5HzVuTxymQm/view> and
our CNI closing plenary, <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ABziVkLAm0> our
office has tried to clear the fog in this blog post
<https://www.authorsalliance.org/2024/01/10/licensing-research-content-via-agreements-that-authorize-uses-of-artificial-intelligence/>.
We provide some sample TDM license language that is inclusive of AI
training as well.

We hope this helps with discussions at your campus.

Best,
Rachael, Tim, and Samantha (our Licensing Specialist)

-- 
Rachael G. Samberg, J.D., MLIS
Scholarly Communication Officer & Program Director
Office of Scholarly Communication Services
University of California, Berkeley
Doe Library, 189 Annex
Berkeley, CA  94720-6000
Pronouns: she/her

*Copyright & Information Policy Guidance
<https://www.lib.berkeley.edu/research/scholarly-communication>*
*Updates <https://twitter.com/UCB_ScholComm>*