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STM 1st Asian Intensive STM Journals Course 24 - 27 February 2008
STM 1st Asian Intensive STM Journals Course
24-27 February 2008
Robert Black College, The University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Overview
The first STM course located in the Asian-Pacific region will be held in Hong Kong 24th to 27th February. The venue is the Robert Black College at the top of the campus of the University of Hong Kong. The course will run from lunchtime on the Sunday until lunchtime on the Wednesday.
The course will be directed by Anthony Watkinson (Senior Lecturer University College London and Director of Training and Education STM) with assistance by Mark Robertson (Wiley-Blackwell) and Maurice Kwong (Springer).There will be a certificate of attendance for all those completing the course from STM and from UCL.
The cost for each student will be €1850 and this will include accommodation for three nights. All meals and all tutorial costs are included too. If an organization is able to send three or more students the cost will be reduced to €1650 per student.
The course is adapted from the course that has been held in Europe for seventeen years. There have been several Asian students on this course every year and the course in Hong Kong is a response to a demand for a local course that has frequently been expressed.
As with the European course, the aim is to provide a serious grounding in all aspects of learned journal publishing. The emphasis will be on understanding in depth the various publishing functions. It is intended that each function should be understood within the overall context of joined-up publishing. The presenters have been asked to describe journal publishing as it is but also the changes that are taking place and the challenges facing our industry.
The case study, which is central to the course, is based upon a real proposal from a group of learned societies in an Asian country. It will involve a written proposal and also each participant will be required to be part of a group presentation. It is however understood by both the presenters and the course tutors that the majority of those taking part in the course will not have English as a first language.
Who Should Attend
To successfully participate in this course, the participants should have some publishing experience within an STM member company or another scholarly or professional publishing organisation. It is only appropriate for those involved in international English-language publishing. It must be emphasised that the course is as much designed for those from production or service functions as for editorial and marketing/sales people.
The size of the venue means that there will only be room for twenty students. There are therefore good reasons for booking places as soon as possible. If there are any queries about the nature of the course, please ask Anthony Watkinson.
Preliminary Programme
Sunday, 24th February
- 12.00 Registration
- 12.30 Lunch
- Introduction
Anthony Watkinson and Mark Robertson (Wiley-Blackwell) - Role and Future of the STM Journal
Michael Mabe (CEO, STM) - Explanation of case Study and delivery of the case study to students
Mark Robertson - Break & initial work on the case study in three groups
- Editorial/Strategic Journal Development
Amanda Davis (Wiley-Blackwell) - More work on case study in three groups
- Pre-dinner drinks with speech about STM
- Evening meal
- Further work on case study in groups
Monday, 25 February
- Breakfast
- Questions & Answers on Case Study
Anthony Watkinson - Finance
Nee Phua (World Scientific) - Break and further work on base study in groups
- Lunch
- Content Management including Hosting
Pam Sutherland (Oxford University Press) - Break
- Subscriptions and Customer Service
Robert Gorter (Elsevier) - Work on case study in groups
- Evening meal followed by further work on case study in groups
Tuesday, 26 February
- Breakfast
- Law and Licensing
Mark Seeley (Elsevier) - Break
- Marketing
TBA - Visit to Library and one hour talk by the librarian
Tony Ferguson - Lunch
- Hand in business financials
- Evening meal
- Hand in written proposals
Wednesday 27 February
- Breakfast
- Presentations by three groups
- Break
- Evaluations, Summing up
Anthony Watkinson, Mark Robertson, Maurice Kwong - Presentation of certificates of attendance and completion from the International Association of STM Publishers and The Centre for Publishing at University College London
- 13.15 Lunch
Building E-Book Collections 2008: Publishers, Librarians and Distributors Share Experiences 14 April 2008
14 April
15.30 - 17.00
Marlborough Rooms
Earls Court, London, UK
Free Registration - Book your place now!
Visit us at the London Book Fair – STM Stand N615
Who should attend
Publishing managers in product development, editorial, marketing, production or business development - from smaller and larger organisations.
Overview
The e-book prophecy is a reality. Following up on 2007’s e-book panel, the panelists will share their recent experiences - sharing the ‘ups and downs’ of the e-book business. oin your colleagues in a panel and lively discussions that will help you navigate these complex waters.
Chair & Organizer
Chris Gibson, Publishing Consultant
Panelists:
So where do we go from here? A look at a publisher's recent experience of entering the E-Book arena
Rolf Janke, Vice President, Publisher, Sage Reference
Sage Reference just entered the on line reference market last year and Rolf will discuss the experience of launching an on line platform in the midst of a significantly changing environment. The presentation will try to answer some of the following questions:
• Where did the students go? It’s all about Gen “Y” and do they really want E-Books?
• Collection – database-bundle. Does one size fit all?
• Is there a perfect business model behind selling E Book Collections?
• Building a global E Book collection and sales strategy.
Distributing eContent: Today and Tomorrow
Mark Carden, Senior Vice President and General Manager, EMEA, MyiLibrary
Many publishers are looking at digital content and the ways they can exploit revenue growth through the different media available. Taking a title from file to customer is a complicated process. In this presentation, Mark Carden will explore the different routes to market, present and future opportunities for publishers and why now is the time to start leveraging digital opportunities.
The use of core reading e-books in UK universities and colleges: a report from the JISC National E-Books Observatory
David Nicholas, Director of the School of Library, Archive and Information Studies, University College London (UCL), and Director of the UCL Centre for Publishing and the research group CIBER.
The paper will provide an early report on the functioning of the JISC national e-books observatory, an innovative project that involved providing more than 120 UK universities and colleges with free access to nearly forty core reading e-books. The books covered Business and Management studies, Engineering, Medicine, and Media Studies. The books are being offered on the Wolters Kluwer Health and MyiLibrary platforms. CIBER are evaluating their use and impact through deep log analysis, online questionnaires and interviews. The paper will be specifically report on a questionnaire which went to scholars in all the institutions participating, which sought to gather background data on e-book use and perceptions. The questionnaire obtained a response of some 20,000 people, probably the largest of its kind, so its findings should carry some weight.
Admission is free for the panel, but advance registration is required for the panel and the London Book Fair.
STM Book 2.02 Seminar: 17 April, 2008, London, UK
Right after the London Book Fair!
STM Book 2.02 Seminar
Now it Gets Real: Making, Selling, Distributing, Discovering and Using E-Books
17 April 2008, London, England
London Marriott Hotel/Kensington
147 Cromwell Road, London, SW5 0TH
09:30 - 17:00
9:30 Welcome & Introduction
Chair: Ellen de Groot, Senior Product Manager, Books on ScienceDirect, Elsevier
9:40 E-Book Sales & Marketing Realities
Moderator: Valentina Kalk, Rights and Online Resources Manager, World Bank Publications
E-Book Sales & Marketing Around the World
Francois Barnaud, OECD, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Since the OECD moved into eBooks ten years ago, they have been the single most important driver of growth in OECD sales and dissemination worldwide. They have allowed us to consolidate our position in existing markets, as well as offered the opportunity to reach completely new ones. François will give a brief introduction to the way the OECD has marketed its eBooks up to now, and consider the main challenges which lie ahead.
Partnering, Channel Conflicts & Managing Relationships
Valentina Kalk
Is more always better? In the early days of the e-books, many pioneering publishers enthusiastically signed up with all possible e-partners. Today, many publishers have their own e-book platforms, aggregators offer competing business models, and search engines sometimes help users discover a bit too much. In addition, publishers often experience competition from within between p- and e- . This session will discuss options and ideas for leveraging partners and channels in an increasingly complex e-world.
End Users: Are we Disconnected? What do we produce? Who should we Reach? Do we Reach Them?
Margo Leach, Marketing Manager, CABI
As an explanation for why we do things as a business, we often hear 'It's how we've always done it', 'It's what our competitors are doing' and 'It's what we're good at doing'… A serious shift in thinking is needed if we are to remain in existence in a rapidly changing market place. There is a reason the 'new' players such as Google are a threat - their mottos are simple: make something the users like using, and the business model will follow. In others words, we need to get in touch with our end users, and ask THEM what they want, not tell them. So how do we do this?
12:00 Making E-Books in the 21st Century
Many of the big commercial publishers have created their own e-book platform. At OUP, we have taken a slightly different approach – maximising our reach with e-books through a combination of innovative licensing deals. During this presentation, Fiona will give an overview of OUP’s approach, and some insights into where they see the future of e-books heading.
12:30 Lunch
1:45 Introduction to Afternoon & E-Textbooks
Edward Crutchley, Book Sales Director, Wiley-Blackwell
Julian Clayton, Vice President, Training & Educational Systems, Wiley-Blackwell
2:20 E-books in Academic Libraries: Attuning the Market to User Needs
Jill Taylor-Roe, Head of Liaison & Academic Services, Robinson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne
At the start of the new millennium, there were many bold predictions of dramatic growth in the e-book market – but the reality certainly failed to live up to the hype. In academic libraries, where ejournals are now firmly established as the format of choice for most of our users, we have long felt frustrated by the lack of desirable etextbook content. At times, the gap between publishers’ offerings and librarians’ wish lists seemed insurmountable. However, the current JISC E-book National Observatory Project has provided an unparalleled opportunity to explore the interests and concerns of all the key players, including those most important of stakeholders - the end users. This paper will consider the current ebook landscape primarily from the perspective of an academic library and will also offer comments on how this might be changing.
2:50 Break
3:30 Discoverability: The Key to Success
Moderator: Suzanne Kemperman, Director, Publisher Relations, OCLC NetLibrary
Ian Mayfield, Associate University Librarian, University of Portsmith, UK
Pete Shemilt, Sales and Marketing Director (EMEA), Academic and Professional Books, Cambridge University Press
Book publishers have become very good at making eBooks and distributing them through existing and emerging channels. But how effective are publishers at marketing eBooks to readers, students and researchers? Do we really understand how consumers are searching for information and how we can influence the conversion of their intentions into profitable actions such as purchase or increased usage? And how can we better work with librarians to improve eBook discovery?
4:45 – 5:00 Wrap-up & Close
STM Annual Spring Conference: 22 - 24 April, 2008
Partnerships in Publishing: An Evolving Ecosystem
Exploring how publishers are adapting and evolving with - authors, editors, societies, users, funders, institutions and more . . .
22 - 24 April 2008
Le Meridien Cambridge
20 Sidney Street
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Annual Conference
Tuesday, April 22
12:00 pm – 6:00 pm Registration
6:00 pm – 7:30 pm Welcome Reception at Le Meridien
Wednesday, April 23
7:45 am Registration & Continental Breakfast
Program
8:45 am Welcome & Opening
Jerry Cowhig, Managing Director, IOPP & Chair, STM Board
9:00 am Keynote
The Cambrian Explosion: Vision and Leadership in the New Age of Educational Entrepreneurship
Patricia Thornton, Associate Professor, Fuqua School of Business, Duke University
In the Cambrian Era fish, reptiles, and insects first appeared on earth to compete or cooperate, evolve or become extinct. Higher education publishing also has a rich history of evolution—from disintermediation from printers and bookstores, under capitalization, the computer, used books, course packs, the consumer movement, and the Internet, among others. Past educational entrepreneurs developed strategies to create and effectively lead challenges to traditional publishers. What tools did they leave buried in the sand that may be excavated to understand current marketplace threats and lead strategies to turn those threats into future entrepreneurial opportunities.
9:45 am Growing Readers and Authors: Insights from HINARI, AGORA and OARE
Kimberly Parker, Hinari Programme Manager, World Health Organization
The developing world is a venue that is attracting the attention of a growing number of publishers looking to expand their readership and attract new authors. Expanding into these areas is not a necessarily a straightforward exercise. This talk will share insights from the HINARI, AGORA, and OARE programs' work with developing countries: the network reality for readers and authors; cell phones vs. Internet and other delivery systems; and the cultural contexts that may affect how researchers use and think about scientific publications.
10:15 am Break
10:45 am Publishing in the Wild panel
Moderator: Paula Gantz, Director, U. S. Business Development, Society Journals, Springer
The panelists will explore innovative models for creating and distributing content to end-users – primarily scientists and academics. While these models are generally electronic, they often have a personal and human component. Their goal is to encourage scientific interaction and to expand a discipline’s knowledge base.
Panelists:
Expanding Services to Research Communities
James Krosschell, Vice President, Society Publishing, Science and Technology, Elsevier
Research scientists have more demands to meet, more tools to use, more information to read than ever before. Publishers are filling these spaces by providing new services integrated with their established offerings. In this session, we will discuss strategies for traditional and non-traditional outreach, from editorial policies and innovation to public relations and meetings that Cell Press and others are using to enrich the research enterprise.
Serving Clinical Communities
Janet O’Flaherty, Publisher, BMJ Journals, BMJ Publishing Group
Clinical journals serve two distinct needs: a forum for publication of original research; and dissemination of information and knowledge to aid decision making in clinical practice. This session will look at how publishers can balance the tension between the needs of “academic” authors and “clinical” readers taking advantage of online and other technologies as well as traditional publishing programs.
Modern Approaches to Publishing Surveys and Reviews
Zac Rolnik, Publisher, nowpublishers
With the vast growth of research output over the past two decades including the introduction of open access journals, working paper archives, blogs, and other grey literature in the last ten years, researchers are literally drowning in information. This greatly increases the need for survey and review literature. This discussion will look at how the web and new electronic technology allows for a modern approach to publishing the review literature including Web 2.0 elements of updating, wiki-like content, video streaming, etc.
2:15 pm Introduction to Keynote Speaker & Afternoon Session
Jerry Cowhig
2:20 pm Keynote
STM Publishing: the known Knowns, the known Unknowns . . . and all points in between
Michael A. Mabe, CEO, STM & Visiting Professor, Information Science, University College, London
With the WWW reaching 17 and e journals and e journal platforms becoming teenagers, what do we really know now about STM publishing? This keynote reviews the evidence of what is known, and looks to see what we ought to know for the future.
3:05 pm Break
3:35 pm E-Sciences Infrastructures panel
Moderator: Dr. H. Fred Dylla, Executive Director & CEO, American Institute of Physics
E-science describes transformations in the scientific enterprise. Driven by information and communication needs of scholars, changes in practices and procedures of science are enabled by infrastructures in distributed computer, information and communication technologies. What opportunities are there for STM publishers in this transformation? The panelists will explore these evolutions and opportunities.
Panelists:
The Digital Knowledge Paradigm and the Future of Scientific Communication
Robert L. Constable, Dean, Computing and Information Science, Cornell University
Combining interactive high performance computing with massive data sets has led to a new knowledge paradigm,
which in turn calls for new means of scholarly communication. The essence of the digital knowledge paradigm is that the evidence for what we know cannot be assembled without computers. The evidence includes digital information assembled by computations beyond the power of humans. Computers thus become indispensable partners in establishing chains of evidence as well as agents of discovery.
Challenge from High Energy Physics
Erick Weinberg, Professor of Theoretical Physics, Columbia University
The high energy physics community has pioneered in the eprint culture the development of web-based tools for indexing and accessing the published and unpublished literature. These have had a major impact on the conduct of research, but raise questions concerning the current and future role of scientific journals. A new challenge is whether the existing e-infrastructure can be expanded to preserve the truly massive data sets soon to be produced by the next generation of experiments.
The Evolving Role of Communication Technologies in Science and Collaboration
Professor Edward H. Shortliffe, Dean, University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix in Partnership with Arizona State University and Editor, Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Computing and communication technologies have become indispensible tools for science, transforming not only the way that researchers share their discoveries, but also the way in which science itself is performed. New support for collaboration, ranging from Internet-based environments for collaboration at a distance (“collaboratories”) to Web 2.0 approaches for knowledge sharing and annotation, are being increasingly embraced by younger scientists who were raised with such technologies as part of their social as well as intellectual milieu. Such trends suggest new opportunities and imperatives for the scientific publishing community.
5:00 pm Close for the day
6:30 pm Cocktail Reception at MIT Musem
7:45 pm Banquet Dinner at MIT Museum 
Thursday, April 24
8:00 am Continental Breakfast
9:15 am Hopelessly lost, but making good time: Libraries rushing hither and yon
Mark Sandler, Director, CIC Center for Library Initiatives Committee on Institutional Cooperation, University of Michigan
Rapid technological changes--and the socio-cultural changes that are both cause and effect of these technological advances--are causing libraries to work overtime to keep up, but with little or no consensus about long-term goals and strategies. Different libraries are placing very different bets--making different investments--to ensure their continued relevance in future years. Some of these directions are well known--mass digitization, open access publishing, institutional repositories, data curation, and all the rest. While none of these is a sure-fire winning strategy, in combination they suggest that libraries no longer believe that simply filling their stacks--or servers--with ever more volumes is the key to satisfying the needs of present and future users. If we grant this premise, it raises all sorts of interesting questions about the relationship between publishers and libraries as each try to find their way forward in uncertain times.
10:00 am Break
10:30 am Adapting to Change panel
Moderator: David Hoole, Head of Content Licensing and Brand Marketing, Nature Publishing Group
Markets are evolving more rapidly than ever. New technologies, new expectations, and new sciences are driving change within the STM publishing industry, as we adapt to new challenges and embrace new opportunities. The panelists will review examples of how we can adapt and grow in this dynamic environment.
Panelists:
Adapting to Change: The Old Gray Lady Puts on Her Dancing Shoes
Sarah Greene, Product Director, Health, The New York Times
“Integration” is the buzz at the New York Times. The once independent nytimes.com corporation is being folded into the newsroom, and the latter is taking the lead in forging NYT’s digital future. What are the unique obstacles and opportunities in online publishing for a print media giant? How does the paper of record maintain its brand of trust while jockeying for top position in the dot-com world of health? The view from an STM publishing entrepreneur.
124 Years and Counting: How IEEE Adapts to Change
Barbara H. Lange, Staff Director, Product Line Management & Publishing Business Development, IEEE
For centuries, the scholarly publishing ecosystem functioned with great predictability. Some could argue that with the pervasiveness of the world wide web, that predictability has disappeared; everything is different now. As IEEE celebrates its 125th anniversary in 2009, it knows something about adapting to change – not just in its expanding technology coverage, but also in its evolving business models and product offerings. This talk will focus on case studies that demonstrate how a scholarly membership association has adapted the change to support new and growing business opportunities while remaining true to its historical roots.
Medical Products are Wrapped in Journal Paper
Henning P. Nielsen, Novo Nordisk & President of the Pharma Documentation Ring (P-D-R) & Sven-Olaf Vogt, Roche
From idea to patient publication is key! The Pharma industry is consuming vast amounts of published content. We author vast amounts of research, and we disseminate even more to support and market our products. Driven by technology, usage is constantly evolving. The presentation will look at new ways of usage and how we can partner to accommodate our changing needs.
12:00 pm Close of conference for non-members
Michael Mabe, CEO STM
12:15 pm Members Only Forum: Current Issues for STM
Jerry Cowhig, Michael Mabe, Mark Seeley, Carlo Scollo Lavizzari
1:00 pm Close of conference
Program Committee
Mayur Amin, Senior Vice President - Research & Academic Relations, Elsevier
William F. Curtis, Ph.D., President, Springer (co-chair)
Fred Dylla, Executive Director & CEO, American Institute of Physics
Paula Gantz, Director, U. S. Business Development, Society Journals, Springer (co-chair)
Nawin Gupta
Lynne Herndon, President and CEO, Cell Press
David Hoole, Head of Content Licensing and Brand Marketing, Nature Publishing Group
Tim Ingoldsby, Director, Strategic Initiatives and Business Development, American Institute of Physics
Barbara Lange, Director, Product Line Management & Publishing Business Development, IEEE
Adam Marshall, Director of Marketing & Customer Service, Portland Press
James Testa, Senior Director, Editorial Development & Publisher Relations, Thomson Scientific
The Le Meridien Cambridge is holding a block of rooms at a reduced rate of $249.00 per night (April 22 & April 23, 2008), if you reserve BEFORE MARCH 22, 2008. Remember to mention the International STM Publishers Conference 2008 room block when contacting the hotel directly 617-577-0200 or register online at STM Spring Conference 2008/Le Meridien.
STM Innovations Seminar 2007- Interactive Environments Online: 7 December 2007, London, UK
STM Innovations Seminar 2007
Interactive Environments Online
Friday, 7 December 2007
Hilton London Kensington
179-199 Holland Park Avenue, London, UK
Program Chairs
Howard Ratner, Chief Technology Officer, Nature Publishing Group
Eefke Smit, STM Director of Stnadards & Technology
Who should attend?
Anyone who wants a broad, strategic view on new innovations for STM publishing. Sessions will be easy for technical and non-technical staff alike to get a good update of what is happening in the online publishing world. This is must-have for people in product development, marketing, and managers of technology portfolios - targeted at publishers of all sizes. Don't miss this seminar!
8:45 Registration starts
Keynote Speaker
9:30 - 10:30 Using Web 2.0 for OUTSIDE INnovation: How Customers are Co-Creating Value & Knowledge
Patricia B. Seybold, CEO, Patricia Seybold Group & Author, Outside Innovation
Patty Seybold takes us on a guided tour of how business customers are rolling up their sleeves to co-create knowledge and value via the Web. With examples from a broad variety of businesses outside and inside STM, we'll look at the online tools customers are using, the kinds of activities they enjoy, and the ways that businesses in a variety of industries are benefiting from customer co-creation. This will provide a stimulating experience for people active in the STM-area where customers manifest themselves as authors as much as end-users or librarians, each with a multitude of opportunities for co-creation lf knowledge and newly added value.
Morning: Plenary Session
What is New in Search
Session Leader: Howard Ratner, Chief Technology Officer, Nature Publishing Group
11:00 - 11:30 Promoting Collaboration and Communities with Scirus Topic Pages
Joris van Rossum, Head of Scirus
Elsevier is experimenting with collaboration and communication with its new platform, Scirus Topic Pages (topics.scirus.com), a free service for the scientific community. Presenting on a single page summaries of specific scientific topics written by scientific experts and Web links to the latest, most relevant journal literature and web sources, Topic Pages will allow scientists to comment and add new information, further accelerating knowledge and fostering community between researchers. Moreover, Scirus Topic Pates will allow Elsevier to experiment with Social Search.
11:30 - 12:00 Beyond Search: Creating a Modern Content Platform
Andy Feit, Vice President, Marketing, Mark Logic Corporation
Next generation content applications are stretching search engines beyond their architectures, including highly enriched content to Web 2.0 personalization and feedback mechanisms to adding social context to search results. The traditional search model, built on returning a “document” to match keywords, no longer delivers the customer experience end-users expect from their content providers. This presentation will focus on the core elements needed to build a modern content platform to meet the evolving needs and will include customer examples that demonstrate these key capabilities.
12:00 - 12:30 Moving from Web Search to Information Search
Heather Dystrup-Chiang, Senior Program Manager, Microsoft Live Search Selection
A large percentage of searches go unanswered – or ill-answered – today. Learn about how Live Search is moving away from a model of providing just ‘a list of links’ and towards a model of richer information search and discovery. Discussion will cover Live Search as a whole, with deep dives into Academic Search and Book Search.
12:45 - 14:00 Lunch
Afternoon: Parallel Sessions
Parallel Session 1: e-books Session
Session Leader: Olaf Ernst, President, eProduct Innovation & Management
14:00 - 14:30 Joachim Engelland, Vice President Business Development, deGruyter
Experiences of a smaller publisher in setting up an eBook project with an integrated e-Content platform.
14:30 - 15:00 Chris Warnock, CEO of ebrary
Will share experiences of an aggregator within the eBook market.
15:00 - 15:30 Willem Endhoven, Vice President, Business Development & Marketing, Philips
New technologies on eBook devices, especially an eBook device they develop – new market opportunities for publishers with the end user market.
15:30 - 16:00 Syed Hasan, President, Sales Americas, Springer
Experiences and lessons learned from Springer’s successful eBook program
Parallel Session 2: Trust Metrics and other Digital Identifiers Session
Session Leader: Eefke Smit, STM Director of Standards & Technology
Anonymous Bosh: Attribution and Authority in a Mashed-up World
14:00 - 14:40 Geoffrey Bilder, Strategy Director CrossRef
On the web identity is cheap and provenance is ambiguous. In short, it is a garden of untrustworthy delights. CrossRef, in its mission "to enable easy identification and use of trustworthy electronic content", is exploring new initiatives that will help publishers highlight the authoritativeness of their content. This presentation will provide an overview of CrossRef's planned plagiarism detection and contributor id services, and will also explore other ways in which we might help the industry create a new epistemic infrastructure for publishing.
OpenID in Action: Opportunities for Publishers
14:40 - 15:20 Simon Willison, OpenID consultant
OpenID is an emerging standard for Web-based single-sign-on that has gained a great deal of support over the past year. This presentation will demonstrate OpenID in action and explain how it differs from other attempts at single-sign-on. It will discuss some of the wider implications of OpenID deployment, and illustrate ways in which OpenID can help publishers serve their users.
15:20 - 16:00 ACAP: Building Trust through effective communication of Access Permissions
Mark Bide, ACAP project coordinator
ACAP (Automated Content Access Protocol) is a brand new, non-proprietary, open standard, developed to protect the intellectual property of anyone wishing to make content available on the worldwide web. By introducing a more sophisticated and yet simple-to-use framework for machine readable access permissions, it aims to make proprietary information on websites more easily accessible for example to search engines. ACAP is the result of an intense and highly collaborative 12-month pilot project between publishers and search engines and will be showcased here to STM members after it was first unveiled a week earlier on November 29 In New York.
Program Chairs
Howard Ratner, Chief Technology Officer, Nature Publishing Group
Eefke Smit, STM Director of Standards & Technology
Members: 450 Euros
Non-Members: 675 Euros
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