[Asis-standards] Fwd: NISO December Newsline

Mark H Needleman needleman_mark at yahoo.com
Wed Dec 7 16:43:42 EST 2016


FYI 

Mark

Sent from Mark Needleman's iPhone

Albert Einstein "There are two things that are limitless, the universe and human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the universe"

Begin forwarded message:

> From: NISOHQ <nisohq at niso.org>
> Date: December 7, 2016 at 3:07:48 PM EST
> To: needleman_mark at yahoo.com
> Subject: NISO December Newsline
> Reply-To: nisohq at niso.org
> 
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> There are many positives associated with being a first mover in a particular market space, such as market leadership, strengthened client relationships, customer loyalty, and an opportunity to leapfrog competitors. Unfortunately, however, moving first often ties one to legacy approaches toward certain processes, an issue that is true of scholarly publishers and the authentication systems that are widely deployed in the library and publishing communities. 
> 
> Libraries and publishers moved quickly to provide their patrons access to subscribed content via IP-address-based authentication systems. This made sense in the early days of the Internet, when most users connected through desktop computers that were hard-wired to campus networks. In the mid-to-late 1990s, few people had home connectivity, and even fewer used mobile devices or laptops connected to a remote network. Since then, transformations in connectivity, institutional collaborations, and mobile computing have greatly enhanced and complicated the ways in which users access content. These complications mean that users experience subscriber access via IP-based protocols that are unreliable and error prone, for reasons unknown to the users.  
>  
> When it works, the user experience and simplicity of IP-based authentication makes accessing content seamless and simple, but the system is also rife with problems. IP addresses are easily spoofed. Also, because the initial IP ranges were far too inadequate for the eventual demand, ranges overlap and are often used as proxies for broader communities than originally designed, making the network horribly insecure. Many nefarious attackers have taken advantage of these vulnerabilities to pirate significant amounts of publisher content.
>  
> We find ourselves in an environment where an outdated, inappropriate solution forms the basis for providing content to millions of users at tens of thousands of institutions. The entire situation is untenable (it probably has been for years) and we need to address the issue at a broad scale.
>  
> A number of initiatives to advance more robust technologies to improve access control have found varying levels of success over the years. Any success is often most dependent on local institutional infrastructure. Also, not every content provider is equally prepared to provide access via methods that are not IP-based. Similarly, not every institution can support these other authentication methods. Finally, the user education issue, meaning the task of informing patrons how to gain access via more robust methods, has gotten short shrift.
>  
> It is about time that libraries and publishers move beyond IP-based authentication. A related effort begun within the STM Association of publishers earlier this year is gaining momentum, and NISO has been engaged in these conversations and is supporting the initiative. Realizing that this work needs to be a broad-based community effort, we are helping to bring library and vendor voices into the conversation. Two community meetings are planned this December, with additional opportunities for engagement lined up as well. Discussions are underway to find means to enhance participation and explore reasonable approaches. This multi-year effort will require participation from a variety of community members. A survey has launched to gain insight into organizational capabilities and interest in this endeavor. If you're interested in helping in these efforts, please respond via the survey. The community will need to establish bridges between institutional IT and content providers and nurture better relationships between patrons and providers.
>  
> NISO is a terrific venue to bring many of these players together in a mutually supportive way to combat these new security challenges. The work will require a great deal of trust and collaboration; qualities NISO brings to the table. We will have our work cut out for us in the coming year.
>  
> With this ambitious agenda, I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season and a productive start to your new year!
>  
> With kindest regards,
>                                                                                                                
>   
> 
> Todd Carpenter 
> Executive Director, NISO
> 
> NISO Reports
>   
> NISO Announces New Publishers Enacting Phase Two of KBART Guidelines, Encourages Other Publishers to Seek Endorsement
> NISO Executive Director to Speak at RMG's 2017 ALA/Midwinter Presidents' Seminar: The View from the Top  
> NISO Professional Development Events in December and January
> Forthcoming ISO Ballots
> New on the NISO Website 
>  
> New Specs & Standards
> 
> COUNTER Code of Practice Release 5 Update 
> Safer, Less Vulnerable Software Is the Goal of New NIST Computer Publication 
> 
> Media Stories
> 
> NISO Recommended Practice: Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics Project 
> Ask The Chefs: Where Is The Balance Between Security, Authentication, Marketing, and Privacy?
> Monographs, Transparency, and Open Access
> Partnering for Discoverability: Knitting Archival Finding Aids to Digitized Material Using a Low Tech Digital Content Linking Process
> Is Open Access Enough? Strategies for Healthier OA
> A PLOS Response to Open in Action with Open Science
> The Internet Archive is Building a Canadian Copy to Protect Itself from Trump
>  
> NISO Reports  
>  
> NISO Announces New Publishers Enacting Phase Two of KBART Guidelines, Encourages Other Publishers to Seek Endorsement 
> The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) is pleased to announce that five publishers are now supplying metadata that conforms to phase two of the recommended practice, KBART: Knowledge Bases And Related Tools (NISO RP-9-2014). Conformance with KBART indicates that the format and content of data supplied by these publishers observe practical recommendations for timely exchange between content providers and knowledge base vendors.
> 
> The newest endorsers are Greenleaf Publishing, Harvard University Press, IEEE, Oxford University Press, and Project MUSE. 
> 
>  
> NISO Executive Director to Speak at RMG's 2017 ALA Midwinter President's Seminar: The View from the Top
> NISO Executive Director, Todd Carpenter, will participate in RMG's upcoming 2017 ALA/Midwinter Presidents' Seminar. At the event, IT consulting firm RMG explains, "company leaders are asked to consider possibilities for new standards and open source platforms to bring a new era of collaboration and interoperability among library industry systems, services, and customers, and with publishers." The meeting will address several questions, including:
> Will FOLIO's Open Source Applications Architecture inspire a catch-up and go-ahead, across-the-library-industry automation era?
> Will diverse, collaborating, and competing library communities and companies leverage a common open source microservices-driven core/platform to the advantage of all?
> Can the library industry create a global library ecosystem of services and software to benefit library users worldwide?
> How will NISO and new standards figure in developing interoperability among library industry players and FOLIO?
> How will FOLIO work with NISO?
> Speakers include Paul Cope (Auto-Graphics), George Coe (Baker & Taylor), Mitchell Davis (BiblioLabs), Mike Grasee (Demco), Neil Block (EBSCO), Sebastian Hammer (Index Data), James Tallman (Innovative Interfaces), Todd Carpenter (NISO), Steve Potash (Overdrive), Skip Dye (Penguin Random House), Jane Burke (ProQuest), Patrick Jones (PTFS/LibLime), Bill Davison (SirsiDynix), and Annette Murphy (The Library Corporation). 
> 
> The seminar will take place on Friday January 20, 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Atlanta, Georgia World Congress Center, Room GWCC A312.
>  
> 
> NISO Professional Development Events in December and January  
> Joint NISO-NFAIS Virtual Conference: Making Certain Digital Content is Preserved: Archiving Digital Resources
> Wednesday, December 7, 2016
> 11:00am - 5pm, EST
> Remember that your paid registration for a NISO virtual conference provides you with access to the archived recording of the full event, so that even if you missed today's live presentation, you can still take advantage of this learning opportunity. Don't let this one get lost in the December rush!
>  
> Publishers, aggregators, government agencies, research institutes, and libraries understand the value in, and require, archiving mechanisms that ensure access to scholarly records in a constantly changing information landscape. Over the last several years, related best practices have been developed and many initiatives have been launched that attempt to rise to the challenge of preserving these works. However, a clear vision for how to support long-term maintenance to ensure this critical information is not lost or degraded, and who will do the work, has sometimes been lacking. This virtual event will address the past, present, and future of digital preservation and include an overview of the field and information on institutional policies, metadata and formats, accessibility, types of archives and repositories, back-up systems, and issues of security. 
> 
> See the NISO event page to learn the topics being addressed by each of these speakers:
> Craig Van Dyck, Executive Director, The CLOCKSS Archive 
> Jonathan Wheeler, Data Curation Librarian, University of New Mexico 
> Andrea Goethals, Manager of Digital Preservation and Repository Services, Harvard University 
> Kate Wittenberg, Managing Director, Portico 
> Amy Kirchhoff, Archive Service Product Manager, Portico 
> Stephanie Orphan, Director, Publisher Relations, Portico 
> Hannah Scates Kettler, Digitial Humanities Research & Instruction Librarian, University of Iowa 
> Elizabeth Waraksa, Program Director for Research and Strategic Initiatives, ARL 
> Peter Herdrich, Co-Founder, Antiquities Coalition 
> Christine Madsen, Chief Innovation Officer and Megan Hurst, Chief Experience Officer, Athenaeum21
> Ricc Ferrante, Information Technology Archivist & Director of Digital Services, Smithsonian Institution Archives
> For registration details and linked online forms, visit the NISO event page.
> 
> NISO Webinar: Make it at the Library: How Does Library Technology Support Makerspaces?
> Wednesday, December 14, 2016, 
> 1:00pm - 2:30pm, EST
> The movement to help support the "maker" culture among libraries has grown and and is creating vibrant communities centered around the library in many communities.  Beyond purchasing equipment and the tools necessary to produce objects, what does the library need to do to support these innovation spaces?  How do traditional library services and information management support these communities and new tools?  This session will explore how some of the most successful makerspaces have been created and how traditional library services are being incorporated into those spaces. During this session, speakers from three different institutions that have implemented makerspaces, who will discuss how they have integrated traditional services into their maker initiatives.
> 
> See the event page to find out what will be discussed on the day by speakers George Meadows, Professor, College of Education, University of Mary Washington; Sara Gonzalez, University of Florida; and John J. Burke, Library Director & Principal Librarian, Gardner-Harvey Library, Miami University at Middletown.
> 
> Begin Thinking Ahead to 2017!
>  
> NISO Webinar: What Can I Do with This? Making It Easy for Scholars & Researchers to Utilize Content
> Wednesday, January 11, 2017
> 1:00pm - 2:30pm
> Building on the NISO Working Group's activities in the realm of Access and License Indicators, this session will examine the new perplexities associated with open access content and its subsequent reuse in other contexts. What exactly is a permissible use? And for whom? Is there a timing factor involved? And how is one supposed to know that? Speakers will address the many concerns of readers, authors, funders, librarians, platform providers and publishers. 
> 
> Confirmed speakers are Darla Henderson, Assistant Director, Open Access Programs, American Chemical Society (ACS); Maureen C. Kelly, Publishing Consultant; and Howard Ratner, Executive Director, CHORUS. Other names to be announced.
>  
> For more information, see the event page.
>  
> NISO Events at ALA Midwinter
> NISO Annual Update & Standards Meeting
> Saturday, January 21, 2017, 10:30am - 12:00pm
> Location: GWCC - B207
> The NISO Annual Meeting & Update will take place on Saturday, January 21 (10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. in Georgia World Congress Center Room B207), where you can hear the latest news about NISO's current efforts, including standards, recommended practices, and community meetings covering many areas of interest to the library community.
> 
> NISO Annual Meeting 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. 
> Join us for our Annual Meeting to learn about the status of the organization, all the work that has taken place in 2016, and what's coming in 2017. The meeting is open to the public and all are welcome to participate.
> 
> NISO Update 11:00 a.m. to Noon. 
> The NISO Update provides the latest news about NISO's current efforts. Working group members and staff will provide updates on projects, some newly underway. 
>  
> For more information, see the event page.
> 
>  
> Forthcoming ISO Ballots  
> NISO Voting members participate in the development, revision, and evaluation of standards. Voting members are able to influence the standards process and mold the future of the industry. The following NISO ballots are open and will close before the next newsletter is distributed. If you are a NISO Voting Member, log into your NISO page and you'll see the ballots linked there.   
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 9:1995 (Ed 2, vers 3) Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Cyrillic characters into Latin characters -- Slavic and non-Slavic languages
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This International Standard establishes a System for the transliteration into Latin characters of Cyrillic characters constituting the alphabets of Slavic and non-Slavic languages, in accordance with the principles of stringent conversion in Order to permit international information exchange, particularly by electronic means.
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 9985:1996 (vers 3) Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Armenian characters into Latin characters
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of the modern Armenian alphabet into Latin characters, in accordance with the principles of stringent conversion in order to permit international information exchange, particularly by electronic means.
> 
> Systematic Review of ISO 15919:2001 (vers 3) -- Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Devanagari and related Indic scripts into Latin characters
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This International Standard provides tables which enable the transliteration into Latin characters from text in Indic scripts which are largely specified in rows 09 to 0D of UCS (ISO/IEC 10646-1 and Unicode).
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 259-2:1994 (vers 3) Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin characters -- Part 2: Simplified transliteration
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This part of ISO 259 specifies a simplified System for the transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin characters. This simplification of the stringent rules established by ISO 259:1984 is especially intended to make easier the processing of bibliographic information (catalogues, indices, citations, etc.).
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 259:1984 (vers 4) Documentation -- Transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin characters
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin characters following the principles of stringent conversion in order to permit international information exchange.
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 233-2:1993 (vers 5)
> Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Arabic characters into Latin characters -- Part 2: Arabic language -- Simplified transliteration  
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This part of ISO 233 establishes a simplified System for the transliteration of Arabic characters into Latin characters. This simplification of the stringent rules established by ISO 233:1984 is especially intended to facilitate the processing of bibliographic information (e.g. catalogues, indices, citations, etc).
>  
> Systematic Review of ISO 233:1984 (vers 4) Documentation -- Transliteration of Arabic characters into Latin characters
> This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of Arabic characters into Latin characters following the principles of stringent conversion in order to permit international information exchange. 
> 
> New Work Item Proposal: Revision and Replacement of the Third Edition of ISO TC 46-SC 9 690, Guidelines for Bibliographic references and citations to information resources
> This International Standard gives guidelines for the preparation of bibliographic references. It also gives guidelines for the preparation of citations in Latin scriptsin works that are not themselves primarily bibliographical. It is applicable to bibliographic references andcitations to all kinds of information resources. This fourth edition willcancel and replace the third edition of ISO 690:2010, which has been technically revised and updated.
> 
> New Work Item Proposal: Description and presentation of rights information in digital collections 
> The proposed standard provides guidelines on how to describe rights information for digital collections and where to present rights information in the pages of such collections.
> 
>  
> New on the NISO Website
> A recording of the November 14, 2016 NISO Open Teleconference "SUSHI and SUSHI-Lite" with Oliver Pesch, EBSCO Information Services and James Van Mil, University of Cincinnati, Standing Committee co-chair
> Slides from the NISO November Two-Part Webinar: Digital Security
> November 9: Part 1: Securing Library Systems
>  
> November 16: Part 2: Protecting Library Resources From Piracy
> 
> New Specs & Standards   
> 
> COUNTER Code of Practice Release 5 Update 
> Last month's Charleston Conference saw a presentation on the latest developments regarding Project COUNTER. These slides from the presentation outline the progress to date with drafting Release 5 of COUNTER, and include information on new reports, metric types and related attributes, report formats, sample use cases, and the project timeline.
> 
>  
> Safer, Less Vulnerable Software Is the Goal of New NIST Computer Publication  
> The new NIST Interagency Report (NISTIR) 8151: Dramatically Reducing Software Vulnerabilities is based on the organization's work with coders in private industry and government agencies. The publication discusses strategies such as using the appropriate language for the task at hand and making programs modular so that if one part fails, it doesn't all crash. In addition, the authors offer ways for members of the programming community to educate themselves on these important techniques.
> sens
> Media Stories    
>  
> NISO Recommended Practice: Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics Project 
> Journal of Collaborative Librarianship 8 (2016) Issue 3; by Jill O'Neill  
> This article by Jill O'Neill, NISO Educational Programs Manager, describes NISO's collaboratively produced Recommended Practice, NISO RP-25-2016, Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics Project. This document "sought to establish a consensus among stakeholders whose activities require robust and precise tools for gauging the impact and reach of scholarship in a globally networked research environment-more robust than were available from impact factor and other such measures." O'Neill also considers next steps, including propelling related efforts and encouraging adoption of the recommended practices. 
> 
>  
> Ask The Chefs: Where Is The Balance Between Security, Authentication, Marketing, and Privacy?
> Scholarly Kitchen, Dec. 1, 2016; by Ann Michael 
> MichaeI, herself a Scholarly Kitchen "Chef," or blogger, asks her fellow chefs David Smith, Joe Esposito, Rick Anderson, Michael Clarke, Todd Carpenter, Jill O'Neill, and Lettie Conrad to discuss the thorny issue of balancing the right to privacy with other important concerns.
> 
>  
> Monographs, Transparency, and Open Access
> The Scholarly Kitchen, December 5, 2016; by Jill O'Neill
> NISO Educational Programs Manager Jill O'Neill finds that, despite some progress in the market, curiosity about a citation can still lead readers down an OA rabbit hole. 
> 
> 
> Partnering for Discoverability: Knitting Archival Finding Aids to Digitized Material Using a Low Tech Digital Content Linking Process 
> Code{4}Lib Journal, Issue 34, Oct. 25, 2016; by Liz Woolcott, Andrea Payant, Sara Skindelien
> "As libraries continue to ramp up digitization efforts for unique archival and special collections material, the segregation of archival finding aids from their digitized counterparts presents an accumulating discoverability problem for both patrons and library staff. [Utah State University Libraries have created a process] for semi-automating the batch linking of item and folder level entries in EAD finding aids to the corresponding digitized material in CONTENTdm." 
>   
> Is Open Access Enough? Strategies for Healthier OA 
> ACRLog, November 12, 2016; by Dylan Burns
> Burns maintains that predatory journals and publishers benefit from faculty and librarian enthusiasm about open access, while at the same time, even quality OA materials are viewed with suspicion by some in the academy because of concerns with the accuracy of Internet material. He offers librarians some solutions to both problems, providing a way to strengthen OA as a movement as well as improve the materials that OA journals publish. 
> 
>  
> A PLOS Response to Open in Action with Open Science
> The Official PLOS Blog, November 4, 2016 by Sheryl P. Denker 
> "With the theme of Open in Action, International Open Access Week 2016 served as a call for researchers, policymakers, funders and publishers around the globe to take 'concrete steps to open up research and scholarship.' In direct response to this call, PLOS thought carefully about Open Science and what it means for us."
>    
> The Internet Archive is Building a Canadian Copy
> Internet Archive Blogs, November 29, 2016; by Brewster Kahle  
> "On November 9th in America," says Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle, "we woke up to a new administration promising radical change. It was a firm reminder that institutions like ours, built for the long-term, need to design for change. For us, it means keeping our cultural materials safe, private and perpetually accessible. It means preparing for a Web that may face greater restrictions." The Archive is therefore building a copy of itself in Canada, with this blog entry soliciting donations for the millions of dollars that undertaking will cost. 
>  
>  
>  
> About NISO Newsline
> 
> ISSN 1559-2774
> 
> NISO's free monthly e-newsletter reports on the latest NISO news, highlights new specifications and standards of interest including calls for public review and comment, abstracts significant media stories on topics of interest to the NISO community, and links to news releases of NISO member organizations.
> Newsline is distributed via e-mail to subscribers on the first Wednesday of the month and is posted to the NISO website.
> 
> Newsline Archive »
>  
>  
>  
> 
> News from NISO Members
>  
> APA Elects Harvard Medical School Associate Professor Jessica Henderson Daniel 2018 President
> 
> Publisher Book Sales Were $5.37 Billion in the First Half of 2016
> 
> Digital Science Invests in Transcriptic, the Robotic Laboratory in the Cloud
> 
> 2016 DIN Prize Winners 
> 
> Plum Analytics Expands Clinical Research Tracking to Include Citations in Clinical Practice Guidelines in PubMed
> 
> IET launches new open access program, IET Open
> 
> Jisc Collections and Elsevier Agreement: Questions and Answers
> 
> Wiley Becomes First Major Publisher to Require ORCID IDs for Submitting Authors
> 
> Alina M. Semo Appointed Director of the Office of Government Information Services
> 
> NGA awards $50K to disparate data challenge winners 
>  
> Request for Information (RFI): Strategic Plan for the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health
> 
> OCLC Releases EZproxy 6.2.2
> 
> ProQuest Releases Results of Its 2016 Space Reclamation Survey
>  
> Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Awards Grant for arXiv Upgrade 
>  
> New MOOC teaches professors to replicate the connectedness that engages, retains students within an online environment
> 
> West Virginia University Libraries Join HathiTrust
> 
> 2017 Big Talk from Small Libraries Call for Speakers
> 
> Zayed University students gear up for Challenge 22 
> 
> 
> Calendar
> 
> Upcoming NISO Events 
> 
> Dec. 7, 2016
> Making Certain Digital Content is Preserved: Archiving Digital Resources  
> NISO Virtual Conference
> 
> December 12, 2016
> Link Origins Tracking
> NISO Open Teleconference
> 
> Dec. 14, 2016
> Make it at the Library: How Does Library Technology Support Makerspaces?
> NISO Webinar
> 
> January 11, 2017
> What Can I Do With This? Making It Easy for Scholars & Researchers to Utilize Content
> NISO Webinar
> 
> January 21, 2017
> NISO Member Meeting/Update at the American Library Association Midwinter Conference
> Georgia World Congress Center, Room GWCC - B207
> Atlanta, GA 
> 
> 
> Other Events of Interest
> 
> Dec. 5-9, 2016
> International Conference on Asia-Pacific Digital Libraries
> Tsukuba, Japan 
>  
> Dec. 11-14, 2016 
> International Conference on Information Systems
> Dublin, Ireland
> 
> Dec. 12-13, 2016
> Coalition for Networked Information (CNI), Fall 2016 Membership Meeting
> Washington, DC, USA  
> 
> Dec. 13-16, 2016
> International Conference on Digital Libraries
> New Delhi, India
>    
> Dec. 16-18, 2016
> International Conference on Accessibility to a Digital World 
> Guwahati, India  
>  
> Dec. 18-20, 2016
> International Conference: Sciences of Electronics, Technologies of Information and Telecommunications
> Hammamet, Tunisia 
> 
> Dec. 28-29, 2016
> Knowledge Globalization Conference 2016
> Dhaka, Bangladesh
> 
> Jan. 4-6, 2017
> International Conference on MultiMedia Modeling 
> Reykjavik, Iceland
> 
> Jan. 7-8
> International Conference on Multidisciplinary Research
> Colombo, Sri Lanka  
>  
> Jan. 7-14, 20
> World Book Fair
> New Delhi, India
>  
> Jan. 24-27, 2017 
> Future of Education Technology Conference
> Orlando, FL
> 
> Jan. 25-Feb. 5, 2017
> International Kolkata Book Fair
> Kolkata, India   
> 
> Feb. 1-4, 2017
> Ontario Library Association Super Conference
> Toronto, ON, Canada 
> 
> Feb. 2 - 3, 2017 
> Association of Canadian Publishers (ACP) Mid-Winter Meeting
> Toronto, ON  
> 
> Feb. 6-10, 2017
> International Conference on Web Search and Web Data Mining
> Cambridge, UK  
> 
> Feb. 9 - 11, 2017
> Specialized Information Publishers Association (SIPA) Winter 2017 Owners and Publishers Retreat 
> Montego Bay, Jamaica      
> Feb. 12 - 15, 2017
> 13th International Conference on Information Technology 
> St. Gallen, Switzerland
> 
> Feb. 13 - 17, 2017
> Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) Information Online 2017 Conference 
> Sydney, NSW, Australia
> 
> Feb. 19 - 21, 2017
> 3rd International Conference on Information Systems Security and Privacy (ICISSP 2017)
> Porto, Portugal
> 
> Feb. 20 - 21, 2017
> Researcher to Reader Conference
> London, UK
> 
> Feb. 20 - 23, 2017
> 12th International Digital Curation Conference
> Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
> 
> Feb. 23 - 26, 2017
> Alaska Library Association 2017 Annual Conference
> Ketchikan, AK 
> 
> Feb. 26 - 28, 2017
> NFAIS 59th Annual Conference
> Alexandria, VA
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Copyright © 2016. National Information Standards Organization
> 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite 302, Baltimore, MD 21211
> 
> Phone: 301-654-2512 Fax: 410.685.5278
> E-mail: nisohq at niso.org
> 
> Newsline editor: Henrietta Verma
> 
> For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from Newsline, ISSN 1559-2774, please access www.copyright.com or contact Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978.750.8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users.
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-------------- next part --------------

   FYI

   Mark
   Sent from Mark Needleman's iPhone
   Albert Einstein "There are two things that are limitless, the universe and
   human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the universe"

   Begin forwarded message:

   From: NISOHQ <[1]nisohq at niso.org>
   Date: December 7, 2016 at 3:07:48 PM EST
   To: [2]needleman_mark at yahoo.com
   Subject: NISO December Newsline
   Reply-To: [3]nisohq at niso.org

   [s.gif]

   [4][bbf65ff5-020a-415e-a0ef-313639075483.jpg] 
   [5]NISO home 
   [6]Newsline Archives 
   [7]News & Events 
   [8][c6414bea-40ed-4fb3-8a56-b8b4aade0c9c.jpg] 
   [9]Publications 
   [32a484fe-7d82-4110-9b4a-170e5df0f1b0.jpg]
   There are many positives associated with being a first mover in a particular
   market space, such as market leadership, strengthened client relationships,
   customer loyalty, and an opportunity to leapfrog competitors. Unfortunately,
   however, moving first often ties one to legacy approaches toward certain
   processes, an issue that is true of scholarly publishers and the
   authentication systems that are widely deployed in the library and
   publishing communities.
   Libraries and publishers moved quickly to provide their patrons access to
   subscribed content via IP-address-based authentication systems. This made
   sense in the early days of the Internet, when most users connected through
   desktop computers that were hard-wired to campus networks. In the
   mid-to-late 1990s, few people had home connectivity, and even fewer used
   mobile devices or laptops connected to a remote network. Since then,
   transformations in connectivity, institutional collaborations, and mobile
   computing have greatly enhanced and complicated the ways in which users
   access content. These complications mean that users experience subscriber
   access via IP-based protocols that are unreliable and error prone, for
   reasons unknown to the users.

   When it works, the user experience and simplicity of IP-based authentication
   makes accessing content seamless and simple, but the system is also rife
   with problems. IP addresses are easily spoofed. Also, because the initial IP
   ranges were far too inadequate for the eventual demand, ranges overlap and
   are often used as proxies for broader communities than originally designed,
   making the network horribly insecure. Many nefarious attackers have taken
   advantage of these vulnerabilities to pirate significant amounts of
   publisher content.

   We find ourselves in an environment where an outdated, inappropriate
   solution forms the basis for providing content to millions of users at tens
   of thousands of institutions. The entire situation is untenable (it probably
   has been for years) and we need to address the issue at a broad scale.

   A number of initiatives to advance more robust technologies to improve
   access control have found varying levels of success over the years. Any
   success is often most dependent on local institutional infrastructure. Also,
   not every content provider is equally prepared to provide access via methods
   that are not IP-based. Similarly, not every institution can support these
   other authentication methods. Finally, the user education issue, meaning the
   task of informing patrons how to gain access via more robust methods, has
   gotten short shrift.

   It is about time that libraries and publishers move beyond IP-based
   authentication. A related [10]effort begun within the STM Association of
   publishers earlier this year is gaining momentum, and NISO has been engaged
   in these conversations and is supporting the initiative. Realizing that this
   work needs to be a broad-based community effort, we are helping to bring
   library and vendor voices into the conversation. Two community meetings are
   planned this December, with additional opportunities for engagement lined up
   as well. Discussions are underway to find means to enhance participation and
   explore reasonable approaches. This multi-year effort will require
   participation from a variety of community members. [11]A survey has launched
   to gain insight into organizational capabilities and interest in this
   endeavor. If you're interested in helping in these efforts, please respond
   via the survey. The community will need to establish bridges between
   institutional IT and content providers and nurture better relationships
   between patrons and providers.

   NISO is a terrific venue to bring many of these players together in a
   mutually supportive way to combat these new security challenges. The work
   will require a great deal of trust and collaboration; qualities NISO brings
   to the table. We will have our work cut out for us in the coming year.

   With this ambitious agenda, I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season
   and a productive start to your new year!

   With kindest regards,


   [60ead791-434d-46dd-9231-1e664de63912.jpg]
   Todd Carpenter
   Executive Director, NISO
   [12]NISO Reports
   
   [13]NISO Announces New Publishers Enacting Phase Two of KBART Guidelines,
   Encourages Other Publishers to Seek Endorsement
     _________________________________________________________________

   [14]NISO Executive Director to Speak at RMG's 2017 ALA/Midwinter Presidents'
   Seminar: The View from the Top
     _________________________________________________________________

   [15]NISO Professional Development Events in December and January
     _________________________________________________________________

   [16]Forthcoming ISO Ballots
     _________________________________________________________________

   [17]New on the NISO Website

   [18]New Specs & Standards
   [19]COUNTER Code of Practice Release 5 Update
     _________________________________________________________________

   [20]Safer, Less Vulnerable Software Is the Goal of New NIST Computer
   Publication
   [21]Media Stories
   [22]NISO Recommended Practice: Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics
   Project
     _________________________________________________________________

   [23]Ask The Chefs: Where Is The Balance Between Security, Authentication,
   Marketing, and Privacy?
     _________________________________________________________________

   [24]Monographs, Transparency, and Open Access
     _________________________________________________________________

   [25]Partnering for Discoverability: Knitting Archival Finding Aids to
   Digitized Material Using a Low Tech Digital Content Linking Process
     _________________________________________________________________

   [26]Is Open Access Enough? Strategies for Healthier OA
     _________________________________________________________________

   [27]A PLOS Response to Open in Action with Open Science
     _________________________________________________________________

   [28]The Internet Archive is Building a Canadian Copy to Protect Itself from
   Trump
   Reports  
   NISO Reports
   Reports3
   [29]NISO Announces New Publishers Enacting Phase Two of KBART Guidelines,
   Encourages Other Publishers to Seek Endorsement
   The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) is pleased to
   announce that five publishers are now supplying metadata that conforms to
   phase two of the recommended practice, [30]KBART: Knowledge Bases And
   Related Tools (NISO RP-9-2014). Conformance with KBART indicates that the
   format and content of data supplied by these publishers observe practical
   recommendations for timely exchange between content providers and knowledge
   base vendors.
   The newest endorsers are Greenleaf Publishing, Harvard University Press,
   IEEE, Oxford University Press, and Project MUSE.
   Reports4
   [31]NISO Executive Director to Speak at RMG's 2017 ALA Midwinter President's
   Seminar: The View from the Top
   NISO Executive Director, Todd Carpenter, will participate in RMG's upcoming
   2017 ALA/Midwinter Presidents' Seminar. At the event, IT consulting firm RMG
   explains, "company leaders are asked to consider possibilities for new
   standards and open source platforms to bring a new era of collaboration and
   interoperability among library industry systems, services, and customers,
   and with publishers." The meeting will address several questions, including:
     * Will FOLIO's Open Source Applications Architecture inspire a catch-up
       and go-ahead, across-the-library-industry automation era?
     * Will diverse, collaborating, and competing library communities and
       companies leverage a common open source microservices-driven
       core/platform to the advantage of all?
     * Can the library industry create a global library ecosystem of services
       and software to benefit library users worldwide?
     * How will NISO and new standards figure in developing interoperability
       among library industry players and FOLIO?
     * How will FOLIO work with NISO?

   Speakers include Paul Cope (Auto-Graphics), George Coe (Baker & Taylor),
   Mitchell Davis (BiblioLabs), Mike Grasee (Demco), Neil Block (EBSCO),
   Sebastian Hammer (Index Data), James Tallman (Innovative Interfaces), Todd
   Carpenter (NISO), Steve Potash (Overdrive), Skip Dye (Penguin Random House),
   Jane Burke (ProQuest), Patrick Jones (PTFS/LibLime), Bill Davison
   (SirsiDynix), and Annette Murphy (The Library Corporation).
   The seminar will take place on Friday January 20, 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
   Atlanta, Georgia World Congress Center, Room GWCC A312.
   Reports5   
   NISO Professional Development Events in December and January  
   Joint NISO-NFAIS Virtual Conference: Making Certain Digital Content is
   Preserved: Archiving Digital Resources
   Wednesday, December 7, 2016
   11:00am - 5pm, EST
   Remember that your paid registration for a NISO virtual conference provides
   you with access to the archived recording of the full event, so that even if
   you missed today's live presentation, you can still take advantage of this
   learning opportunity. Don't let this one get lost in the December rush!
    
   Publishers, aggregators, government agencies, research institutes, and
   libraries understand the value in, and require, archiving mechanisms that
   ensure access to scholarly records in a constantly changing information
   landscape. Over the last several years, related best practices have been
   developed and many initiatives have been launched that attempt to rise to
   the challenge of preserving these works. However, a clear vision for how to
   support long-term maintenance to ensure this critical information is not
   lost or degraded, and who will do the work, has sometimes been lacking. This
   virtual event will address the past, present, and future of digital
   preservation and include an overview of the field and information on
   institutional policies, metadata and formats, accessibility, types of
   archives and repositories, back-up systems, and issues of security.
   See the [32]NISO event page to learn the topics being addressed by each of
   these speakers:
     * Craig Van Dyck, Executive Director, The CLOCKSS Archive
     * Jonathan Wheeler, Data Curation Librarian, University of New Mexico
     * Andrea Goethals, Manager of Digital Preservation and Repository
       Services, Harvard University
     * Kate Wittenberg, Managing Director, Portico
     * Amy Kirchhoff, Archive Service Product Manager, Portico
     * Stephanie Orphan, Director, Publisher Relations, Portico
     * Hannah Scates Kettler, Digitial Humanities Research & Instruction
       Librarian, University of Iowa
     * Elizabeth Waraksa, Program Director for Research and Strategic
       Initiatives, ARL
     * Peter Herdrich, Co-Founder, Antiquities Coalition
     * Christine Madsen, Chief Innovation Officer and Megan Hurst, Chief
       Experience Officer, Athenaeum21
     * Ricc Ferrante, Information Technology Archivist & Director of Digital
       Services, Smithsonian Institution Archives

   For registration details and linked online forms, visit the [33]NISO event
   page.
   NISO Webinar: Make it at the Library: How Does Library Technology Support
   Makerspaces?
   Wednesday, December 14, 2016,
   1:00pm - 2:30pm, EST
   The movement to help support the "maker" culture among libraries has grown
   and and is creating vibrant communities centered around the library in many
   communities.  Beyond purchasing equipment and the tools necessary to produce
   objects, what does the library need to do to support these innovation
   spaces?  How do traditional library services and information management
   support these communities and new tools?  This session will explore how some
   of the most successful makerspaces have been created and how traditional
   library services are being incorporated into those spaces. During this
   session, speakers from three different institutions that have implemented
   makerspaces, who will discuss how they have integrated traditional services
   into their maker initiatives.
   See the [34]event page to find out what will be discussed on the day by
   speakers George Meadows, Professor, College of Education, University of Mary
   Washington; Sara Gonzalez, University of Florida; and John J. Burke, Library
   Director & Principal Librarian, Gardner-Harvey Library, Miami University at
   Middletown.
   Begin Thinking Ahead to 2017!
   
   NISO Webinar: What Can I Do with This? Making It Easy for Scholars &
   Researchers to Utilize Content
   Wednesday, January 11, 2017
   1:00pm - 2:30pm
   Building on the NISO Working Group's activities in the realm of [35]Access
   and License Indicators, this session will examine the new perplexities
   associated with open access content and its subsequent reuse in other
   contexts. What exactly is a permissible use? And for whom? Is there a timing
   factor involved? And how is one supposed to know that? Speakers will address
   the many concerns of readers, authors, funders, librarians, platform
   providers and publishers.
   Confirmed speakers are Darla Henderson, Assistant Director, Open Access
   Programs, American Chemical Society (ACS); Maureen C. Kelly, Publishing
   Consultant; and Howard Ratner, Executive Director, CHORUS. Other names to be
   announced.
   
   For more information, see the [36]event page.
    
   NISO Events at ALA Midwinter
   NISO Annual Update & Standards Meeting
   Saturday, January 21, 2017, 10:30am - 12:00pm
   Location: GWCC - B207
   The NISO Annual Meeting & Update will take place on Saturday, January 21
   (10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. in Georgia World Congress Center Room B207), where
   you can hear the latest news about NISO's current efforts, including
   standards, recommended practices, and community meetings covering many areas
   of interest to the library community.
   NISO Annual Meeting 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
   Join us for our Annual Meeting to learn about the status of the
   organization, all the work that has taken place in 2016, and what's coming
   in 2017. The meeting is open to the public and all are welcome to
   participate.
   NISO Update 11:00 a.m. to Noon.
   The NISO Update provides the latest news about NISO's current efforts.
   Working group members and staff will provide updates on projects, some newly
   underway.

   For more information, see the [37]event page.
   Reports6
   Forthcoming ISO Ballots
   NISO Voting members participate in the development, revision, and evaluation
   of standards. Voting members are able to influence the standards process and
   mold the future of the industry. The following NISO ballots are open and
   will close before the next newsletter is distributed. If you are a NISO
   Voting Member, [38]log into your NISO page and you'll see the ballots linked
   there.

   Systematic Review of ISO 9:1995 (Ed 2, vers 3) Information and documentation
   -- Transliteration of Cyrillic characters into Latin characters -- Slavic
   and non-Slavic languages
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   International Standard establishes a System for the transliteration into
   Latin characters of Cyrillic characters constituting the alphabets of Slavic
   and non-Slavic languages, in accordance with the principles of stringent
   conversion in Order to permit international information exchange,
   particularly by electronic means.

   Systematic Review of ISO 9985:1996 (vers 3) Information and documentation --
   Transliteration of Armenian characters into Latin characters
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of the
   modern Armenian alphabet into Latin characters, in accordance with the
   principles of stringent conversion in order to permit international
   information exchange, particularly by electronic means.
   Systematic Review of ISO 15919:2001 (vers 3) -- Information and
   documentation -- Transliteration of Devanagari and related Indic scripts
   into Latin characters
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   International Standard provides tables which enable the transliteration into
   Latin characters from text in Indic scripts which are largely specified in
   rows 09 to 0D of UCS (ISO/IEC 10646-1 and Unicode).

   Systematic Review of ISO 259-2:1994 (vers 3) Information and documentation
   -- Transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin characters -- Part 2:
   Simplified transliteration
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   part of ISO 259 specifies a simplified System for the transliteration of
   Hebrew characters into Latin characters. This simplification of the
   stringent rules established by ISO 259:1984 is especially intended to make
   easier the processing of bibliographic information (catalogues, indices,
   citations, etc.).

   Systematic Review of ISO 259:1984 (vers 4) Documentation -- Transliteration
   of Hebrew characters into Latin characters
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of
   Hebrew characters into Latin characters following the principles of
   stringent conversion in order to permit international information exchange.

   Systematic Review of ISO 233-2:1993 (vers 5)
   Information and documentation -- Transliteration of Arabic characters into
   Latin characters -- Part 2: Arabic language -- Simplified transliteration  
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   part of ISO 233 establishes a simplified System for the transliteration of
   Arabic characters into Latin characters. This simplification of the
   stringent rules established by ISO 233:1984 is especially intended to
   facilitate the processing of bibliographic information (e.g. catalogues,
   indices, citations, etc).

   Systematic Review of ISO 233:1984 (vers 4) Documentation -- Transliteration
   of Arabic characters into Latin characters
   This is a ballot for the five-year systematic review of the standard. This
   International Standard establishes a system for the transliteration of
   Arabic characters into Latin characters following the principles of
   stringent conversion in order to permit international information exchange.
   New Work Item Proposal: Revision and Replacement of the Third Edition of ISO
   TC 46-SC 9 690, Guidelines for Bibliographic references and citations to
   information resources
   This International Standard gives guidelines for the preparation of
   bibliographic references. It also gives guidelines for the preparation of
   citations in Latin scriptsin works that are not themselves primarily
   bibliographical. It is applicable to bibliographic references andcitations
   to all kinds of information resources. This fourth edition willcancel and
   replace the third edition of ISO 690:2010, which has been technically
   revised and updated.
   New Work Item Proposal: Description and presentation of rights information
   in digital collections 
   The proposed standard provides guidelines on how to describe rights
   information for digital collections and where to present rights information
   in the pages of such collections.
   Reports7
   New on the NISO Website
     * A recording of the November 14, 2016 [39]NISO Open Teleconference "SUSHI
       and SUSHI-Lite" with Oliver Pesch, EBSCO Information Services and James
       Van Mil, University of Cincinnati, Standing Committee co-chair

     * Slides from the NISO November Two-Part Webinar: Digital Security
       [40]November 9: Part 1: Securing Library Systems

       [41]November 16: Part 2: Protecting Library Resources From Piracy

   Specs
   New Specs & Standards   
   Specs1
   [42]COUNTER Code of Practice Release 5 Update 
   Last month's Charleston Conference saw a presentation on the latest
   developments regarding Project COUNTER. These slides from the presentation
   outline the progress to date with drafting Release 5 of COUNTER, and include
   information on new reports, metric types and related attributes, report
   formats, sample use cases, and the project timeline.
   Specs2
   [43]Safer, Less Vulnerable Software Is the Goal of New NIST Computer
   Publication
   The new NIST Interagency Report (NISTIR) 8151: [44]Dramatically Reducing
   Software Vulnerabilities is based on the organization's work with coders in
   private industry and government agencies. The publication discusses
   strategies such as using the appropriate language for the task at hand and
   making programs modular so that if one part fails, it doesn't all crash. In
   addition, the authors offer ways for members of the programming community to
   educate themselves on these important techniques.
   sens
   MediaStories Media Stories   
     Media1
   [45]NISO Recommended Practice: Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics
   Project
   Journal of Collaborative Librarianship 8 (2016) Issue 3; by Jill O'Neill  
   This article by Jill O'Neill, NISO Educational Programs Manager, describes
   NISO's collaboratively produced Recommended Practice, [46]NISO RP-25-2016,
   Outputs of the Alternative Assessment Metrics Project. This document "sought
   to establish a consensus among stakeholders whose activities require robust
   and precise tools for gauging the impact and reach of scholarship in a
   globally networked research environment-more robust than were available from
   impact factor and other such measures." O'Neill also considers next steps,
   including propelling related efforts and encouraging adoption of the
   recommended practices.
   MediaB
   [47]Ask The Chefs: Where Is The Balance Between Security, Authentication,
   Marketing, and Privacy?
   Scholarly Kitchen, Dec. 1, 2016; by Ann Michael 
   MichaeI, herself a Scholarly Kitchen "Chef," or blogger, asks her fellow
   chefs David Smith, Joe Esposito, Rick Anderson, Michael Clarke, Todd
   Carpenter, Jill O'Neill, and Lettie Conrad to discuss the thorny issue of
   balancing the right to privacy with other important concerns.
   MediaC
   [48]Monographs, Transparency, and Open Access
   The Scholarly Kitchen, December 5, 2016; by Jill O'Neill
   NISO Educational Programs Manager Jill O'Neill finds that, despite some
   progress in the market, curiosity about a citation can still lead readers
   down an OA rabbit hole.
   MediaD
   [49]Partnering for Discoverability: Knitting Archival Finding Aids to
   Digitized Material Using a Low Tech Digital Content Linking Process
   Code{4}Lib Journal, Issue 34, Oct. 25, 2016; by Liz Woolcott, Andrea Payant,
   Sara Skindelien
   "As libraries continue to ramp up digitization efforts for unique archival
   and special collections material, the segregation of archival finding aids
   from their digitized counterparts presents an accumulating discoverability
   problem for both patrons and library staff. [Utah State University Libraries
   have created a process] for semi-automating the batch linking of item and
   folder level entries in EAD finding aids to the corresponding digitized
   material in CONTENTdm."
   MediaE
   [50]Is Open Access Enough? Strategies for Healthier OA
   ACRLog, November 12, 2016; by Dylan Burns
   Burns maintains that predatory journals and publishers benefit from faculty
   and librarian enthusiasm about open access, while at the same time, even
   quality OA materials are viewed with suspicion by some in the academy
   because of concerns with the accuracy of Internet material. He offers
   librarians some solutions to both problems, providing a way to strengthen OA
   as a movement as well as improve the materials that OA journals publish.
   MediaF
   [51]A PLOS Response to Open in Action with Open Science
   The Official PLOS Blog, November 4, 2016 by Sheryl P. Denker
   "With the theme of Open in Action, International Open Access Week 2016
   served as a call for researchers, policymakers, funders and publishers
   around the globe to take 'concrete steps to open up research and
   scholarship.' In direct response to this call, PLOS thought carefully about
   Open Science and what it means for us."
   MediaG
   [52]The Internet Archive is Building a Canadian Copy
   Internet Archive Blogs, November 29, 2016; by Brewster Kahle
   "On November 9th in America," says Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle,
   "we woke up to a new administration promising radical change. It was a firm
   reminder that institutions like ours, built for the long-term, need to
   design for change. For us, it means keeping our cultural materials safe,
   private and perpetually accessible. It means preparing for a Web that may
   face greater restrictions." The Archive is therefore building a copy of
   itself in Canada, with this blog entry soliciting donations for the millions
   of dollars that undertaking will cost.



   About NISO Newsline
   ISSN 1559-2774
   NISO's free monthly e-newsletter reports on the latest NISO news, highlights
   new specifications and standards of interest including calls for public
   review and comment, abstracts significant media stories on topics of
   interest to the NISO community, and links to news releases of NISO member
   organizations.
   Newsline is distributed via e-mail to subscribers on the first Wednesday of
   the month and is posted to the NISO website.
   [53]Newsline Archive »
   [54][19484041-c034-4610-b919-ad7524390639.jpg] 
   [55][253ac6df-f3b3-4f68-940a-cb62062d9d24.jpg] 
   [56][af606df3-c60e-48bc-bb07-349948979b3d.jpg] 
   News from NISO Members
    
   [57]APA Elects Harvard Medical School Associate Professor Jessica Henderson
   Daniel 2018 President
   [58]Publisher Book Sales Were $5.37 Billion in the First Half of 2016
   [59]Digital Science Invests in Transcriptic, the Robotic Laboratory in the
   Cloud
   [60]2016 DIN Prize Winners
   [61]Plum Analytics Expands Clinical Research Tracking to Include Citations
   in Clinical Practice Guidelines in PubMed
   [62]IET launches new open access program, IET Open
   [63]Jisc Collections and Elsevier Agreement: Questions and Answers
   [64]Wiley Becomes First Major Publisher to Require ORCID IDs for Submitting
   Authors
   [65]Alina M. Semo Appointed Director of the Office of Government Information
   Services
   [66]NGA awards $50K to disparate data challenge winners 

   [67]Request for Information (RFI): Strategic Plan for the National Library
   of Medicine, National Institutes of Health
   [68]OCLC Releases EZproxy 6.2.2
   [69]ProQuest Releases Results of Its 2016 Space Reclamation Survey

   [70]Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Awards Grant for arXiv Upgrade

   [71]New MOOC teaches professors to replicate the connectedness that engages,
   retains students within an online environment
   [72]West Virginia University Libraries Join HathiTrust
   [73]2017 Big Talk from Small Libraries Call for Speakers
   [74]Zayed University students gear up for Challenge 22
   Calendar
   Upcoming NISO Events
   Dec. 7, 2016
   [75]Making Certain Digital Content is Preserved: Archiving Digital Resources
    
   NISO Virtual Conference
   December 12, 2016
   [76]Link Origins Tracking
   NISO Open Teleconference
   Dec. 14, 2016
   [77]Make it at the Library: How Does Library Technology Support Makerspaces?
   NISO Webinar
   January 11, 2017
   [78]What Can I Do With This? Making It Easy for Scholars & Researchers to
   Utilize Content
   NISO Webinar
   January 21, 2017
   [79]NISO Member Meeting/Update at the American Library Association Midwinter
   Conference
   Georgia World Congress Center, Room GWCC - B207
   Atlanta, GA 
   Other Events of Interest
   Dec. 5-9, 2016
   International Conference on Asia-Pacific Digital Libraries
   Tsukuba, Japan
   
   Dec. 11-14, 2016
   International Conference on Information Systems
   Dublin, Ireland
   Dec. 12-13, 2016
   Coalition for Networked Information (CNI), Fall 2016 Membership Meeting
   Washington, DC, USA 
   Dec. 13-16, 2016
   International Conference on Digital Libraries
   New Delhi, India

   Dec. 16-18, 2016
   International Conference on Accessibility to a Digital World
   Guwahati, India

   Dec. 18-20, 2016
   International Conference: Sciences of Electronics, Technologies of
   Information and Telecommunications
   Hammamet, Tunisia
   Dec. 28-29, 2016
   Knowledge Globalization Conference 2016
   Dhaka, Bangladesh
   Jan. 4-6, 2017
   International Conference on MultiMedia Modeling
   Reykjavik, Iceland
   Jan. 7-8
   International Conference on Multidisciplinary Research
   Colombo, Sri Lanka
    
   Jan. 7-14, 20
   World Book Fair
   New Delhi, India

   Jan. 24-27, 2017
   Future of Education Technology Conference
   Orlando, FL
   Jan. 25-Feb. 5, 2017
   International Kolkata Book Fair
   Kolkata, India
   Feb. 1-4, 2017
   Ontario Library Association Super Conference
   Toronto, ON, Canada
   Feb. 2 - 3, 2017
   Association of Canadian Publishers (ACP) Mid-Winter Meeting
   Toronto, ON
   Feb. 6-10, 2017
   International Conference on Web Search and Web Data Mining
   Cambridge, UK 
   Feb. 9 - 11, 2017
   Specialized Information Publishers Association (SIPA) Winter 2017 Owners and
   Publishers Retreat
   Montego Bay, Jamaica
   Feb. 12 - 15, 2017
   13th International Conference on Information Technology  
   St. Gallen, Switzerland
   Feb. 13 - 17, 2017
   Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) Information Online
   2017 Conference  
   Sydney, NSW, Australia
   Feb. 19 - 21, 2017
   3rd International Conference on Information Systems Security and Privacy
   (ICISSP 2017)
   Porto, Portugal
   Feb. 20 - 21, 2017
   Researcher to Reader Conference
   London, UK
   Feb. 20 - 23, 2017
   12th International Digital Curation Conference
   Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
   Feb. 23 - 26, 2017
   Alaska Library Association 2017 Annual Conference
   Ketchikan, AK
   Feb. 26 - 28, 2017
   NFAIS 59th Annual Conference
   Alexandria, VA
   Copyright © 2016. National Information Standards Organization
   3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite 302, Baltimore, MD 21211
   Phone: 301-654-2512 Fax: 410.685.5278
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   5. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVszQo9KR00C5aOmIDV9p7174d_uI72yKZqgT5mmdtbBtcJt-I4rV-ruZRi3SQ_V-UWBOVqD9yNRc3qB30y9NebENLQKixOOX0PGc02_AO2uUzw=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
   6. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOEmXlARQVxegmYwMGhkjNTOL2Swy-Enjfpi_T3p8vmB1fOQG8qkhxggOtnW-FfiF7lOSaSvq1lIlL3uGbUm0pfoOt4uKzTIq_LQ5DsG1YkhWY31q6wRqaq7BS88Fm-Pp53CtdfF_83Bb4=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
   7. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOE2NG0KCRZfMQjQ6nrRZJLDIf9hHQdLNZV2OccxJOCDPCR4NH2TSWd4WvueAIPn8kG1WONRGDgEj45SRG_emV4JALNz_mxmbdhKK2_Tou3H5V9kp9bjZUOmw==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
   8. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOEYuKBhS6IUo6x7hGCQnF1kbPUovJKegnKWUm2xe_VCbjP4dsB17DpqR1YM2GGXwOcboWQDIXH77k9DixWL6pHV3Iz6u-FwyshjRPpecJc_IHxKjb4f83LTDGgIY-vG4PDYMFwluEdJJw=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
   9. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOEShu_2f_ISixICj6mIfqqG6zxDSOYmguO245EowRLNIRfie3jo-4FUmNSY1CmhRKad6fzatVh5B2F4LKNROCd9fglPuqIj1LpCFo70pVKvleknkkm2f0gMk4K8UAbqkSt&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  10. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJps1LL1rbSh8PZ2oUjR1EAw1gHqXeSuWbp8hXGSzBIoxy3RKlsbyNyds1ZRN9W6YCVAT1L5VzAgRxdD0xZGLOaxHnge7ASImV4dzmqSDrY91PEMGZImylE2xpY9c7l-e4Cb94e00MzjLmP0dJBk_oxTHhTvq0lnvsSxVUTjuZ46KqQtVSY1QqORD0XgLxTjpNbz&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  11. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsA8w3Tzo0qba6Y2lrANlX-Ph9oKTgHo6c76RCIxiAksGU6SR4c19m6SIOvrTjgVwF7piDbeDG1rx5oUCDBdlBl3kXWoiuNtwKH9jD-NZsTtZkZ76EsLAdXkyf5nebxMiqIGu_qGEKnaRe8NC863Mb1F4e04unngP-vJ7mW2O4HgQ1wqzAM8EN5zGrPgXrg8kS1VUqdEb8MC5tOF7JO1OOxicI3_qLTtgw&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  12. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports
  13. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports3
  14. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports4
  15. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports5
  16. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports6
  17. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Reports7
  18. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Specs
  19. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Specs
  20. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Specs2
  21. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaStories
  22. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#Media1
  23. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaB
  24. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaC
  25. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaD
  26. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaE
  27. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaF
  28. file://localhost/tmp/tmpHS4qXa.html#MediaG
  29. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpszyjPeaDfz9qtYeRqM2jS4FTloybT76D_HBH6GQRmpPNY8zd5LezUSMmSMrhR3Dm8Igr5hC5Qj9yXH-1USAD-dr_mPI-6rSRTCff-TPZkNL44WQZ1A4nGAeIWqeN0cZlhKKflYnlADdqFhBOMBdensuTKUo800xIy_7zibXiGNR_-sp1tz6BIwcSruhcMfpfcKkkb8QQDPl4=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  30. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl2eyuiDEVv2vNxHTcYsBL2AI1Ugwn9ZMB-HDlxwtjEyRPEuCEfO9x3VTXtF-VwFhBIOe49fg0_39_lQ2ZCNHiBlabIHAcEanH2j9LndKdsNwlnkg_sj_yEhEAG0B9tgnkASmdxKTBHlwi09bOA7HzLhXoGgxX-_70w==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  31. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsPnZZSmrQqmuWpRNC8q5E1l6ub-nvGe2a-AsrR7nitYoMqFGM1brrsuXVUTSVVnmaKRBrwQDaPwo-IA2_4sJlDqFMwJvO6q7o1v1iCP7H525eUYzcb6xs3WHAmcnQrezIELjBcdvDhh3TQFIX9CgVFfiASFb3tSxI&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  32. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVsz1du0ZimaobJvhgzK_Vl1H94_dAaWw070C8OwSeHi8UvY6oSXu5LyJdA7lGtTqXf4bMvJUQC-0_IXNSNksRSnumscjqCPBRZbfP6R0XLIeJge_6DWHl24a4uxvKIGj4LU28lTpF7lnv6JFbH7LXXpc4BDpVwdPoeai1XM9MKtwDalNHk3DNCA9AZBFaN8hNIp&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  33. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVsz1du0ZimaobJvhgzK_Vl1H94_dAaWw070C8OwSeHi8UvY6oSXu5LyJdA7lGtTqXf4bMvJUQC-0_IXNSNksRSnumscjqCPBRZbfP6R0XLIeJge_6DWHl24a4uxvKIGj4LU28lTpF7lnv6JFbH7LXXpc4BDpVwdPoeai1XM9MKtwDalNHk3DNCA9AZBFaN8hNIp&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  34. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVszdozMPn6JdjWh4VRpcz8jcLxgOxDyykJybXdthF79nbduMdunV74quFa4Hfy61Ov6Bwe4CAx38rf8uk1ZNa_kqGNegSdiY9Y_IbRE0q_ks6R498mrMP7ypfJTFLr1gMV0lzGqVSbXH3pC5a7H5oOePjukENTC62tlnorL6GlTOM0=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  35. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl2eyuiDEVv2vKXpm-tIlQXIxfGi7phNtl1mfROFOMfGDEr9TS3715rm7D0ssD_foJ6pDaMBOe1uKZ7vqu6W4kjdAIY_ZMgaZj0VI29LUaUCyKlM82wfL4K2e17FwdZI8njF1gIhSwSx-&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  36. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsqAmn_UoF2L_cQ7toqesGvHVhofRpw4_OTSCjonrMMTfNlsJ3OKgb9fcZsSQbfZElBoaZQXjLbV7DRhCVQtnpK_yGezfuVhWkgwggn_4qz2P1FGdpwNXf-SToJc-VSb2CqGYwRPycMDIgtP8GItjh39cjX-3WFcFHouXw13XT7mU=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  37. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsdrzyUvd9HIrSyiRq9ZO_qKuDe7MQMT9PGre_ahx_hfdTGO_3JrzP3krENsV-hKSHx1YW8snLpTiQKn09LXt1pqGivX-68iO6wMHNJb12uUqtCSEOV97ZfNvd8EziDLtvt9p0uZChhpYr90Dg2BL-vQ==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  38. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2glxl9XtzlGSIjSEYcyBQIyOSQbHUlBXL98Mjq-59ld8Km124HIkormWW_7c57cSQXdRTzHdRj6SlXdLI_QsCfpWUwfuH_eAKJyd8gpiHwpBQONU75q1EuUu-tV4N_xN-tdurDfQa7nudRapXhpmY81u4NJl3eaRWmxIU-H3Ow-3egcdMw4in3ZDo=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  39. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsIkTaSZyrdHRtjhDZxCTAVLjNWFuvkuRjtVVr-YPWfgfeEijWo2akwMx-xkZXbsqWzckh64qhn_j1TckHxgNPitj6aeTq3_QI2unACBs-o0QrAIflKTCFMa30lJ1dhgBxGLnWeinW9NnvZ2c4Gpwc9COgiFoDbdMG6tcI90v7c8BW7WAp4MhqVT27trqToPk7t6pbAxamH6nKN-LSqneT0tyu8ZC0s2XqzFXu-Fd6iECcfaP929NUOkoN-Vtr_dvJ&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  40. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVsz8CZSju1P7B5OoyZEj-okptqEYS4NlYvE3-TcLXeHV_41_sdkCU0MCnXbcnXWzO_AG8MDuff45ombLy7ifsCJqFvND2p9BSjgZPpZyLsaOeuoxbAnZf70pqHqOs5veqJnSckSRcS5DFJR0Z-11ZjzMomcYprmnA99E7DbYNAGIFc=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  41. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl9DA1QSXSWNwwGgDSYAOt8z1Ph28maVDHkL-ld96tbCGbw8Bj4drzUm2iGwN4wuOL6UqE8kEF1QhI9iHBdTM4wfbvL3H-X-aRS64bqjMvS9AIUG2npyKGhdjtj1KceAAp5-hgLKfHNSVhpI4BPs0Myc4tqLsOU8iwbaLhusC0272_RvRB2rANVk=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  42. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsv_lE9dHzE3UeBR2dnLcS1ufQ3qFqVRuPrWSqedRxUrSg5as-WL7blUTgHkK25HOkkImPbNyJ9IrjJrualVnZ0JLIreVn8ZkwmMZn-XZlBEp8YZoEGyoVjja-VUVG7zSdI8-_2yfc4F-IS-oaJAEcLsGfBoh2_BO1ZRabdAs-DTSjJnuDvwpdPii-16n-TI3HDKy9EVCC0nM=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  43. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsYY4U_p72EaynxWcGYgZqSuG7aiQt0XpRNgb2dbUF98AAJh6TKJi9KagtjHuOHQTomjT7RUE4W3YTZWHx8-rg5xDenBxDs77Z64ptuY4egXKxPXi7E2qOJ_aAJOlfBFGEcyn-Gkw5OCPcT_y2_M3HFp53hiHScAcLh8Mc1HTt7oqgU5HtAGjulYaFhYg4mUfN8IBKHxTBIQqH_d2gSutPOnde2DB4tdTE9O21ZCNvx7U=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  44. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsjg8IORCqQgFuCmz8ciTPuQELMRNxmSDjhg4w0pt-NzOlvEv0c_4IRJJX60tuYlNXxlWzctuXe-xt-igE_aQYjNEexGvWlzH6hSGpoaocR9W_0YSOUjikZfaghM7q4RM4&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  45. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsPjyy4k1s_OaxVpPfuF03r1jqVMFAevWhI9xs6lPDk3hweyA0CaQ4siESGSwyqnMwqHMrn_-Kn4KXZywdlhbOMS74jOUssD0RGuI4cgVUTulz0pHCq8znPlg6VgUrWdXt9m-isruAjtxX4Tu18bf4YKkbu_-4A8sgHTs3tmYcq09q9jFaot4yeOlnDYNzzB1M4K--4UTcKFKBw-vlOLqXEV3RRSuszEjV&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  46. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl45eKTChB8FBNUXzUJS8ROIA4fQwmDXntuLSZU7qcVVVIFGt4sn1j58SKhZ_05WHzqhk0Z17faUOGX-mXM30crhMeUHtz5zx1GYYiBbhvGy5Glqdbfa1h-KlhAEwSt8pnG3KwTJRmkvDrTmgtC98TQu7_GTKgiOnp188dJcW_eSMBnk2nO9RdxZ_3rgzG0MVq82j2g948hdG8_buzqWVa_QKItoyyXuc-7xaWBPSKCtbDxeGqFUJphP_DgzxawK-ROvbOrbUkPKnbuw8WU4KwsqGsCT6fplJmmrMveYT8B4fm9Vb5QPw7sw=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  47. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsLCcTE99QkPN2VHewbPFfBdasvad0mtfZdipS9LzZk_kjtl7ji-ChkkzFs6T-zx6vUwBn8iIxh9P42imxJWRwvem6xFZ3NFiutINzdba94a1iEGL9rT2d8qe2hgA3FxEioi-5_3tdu5t2jSk620_J4qffLM9fEdJGRiALxvG3TDbHopuA_v0HINOaG9YXqsZ3cQmQzJK9EfcflKIBtlGT8goxlptvN-9tzAGT_BDwaOrwyJ-l53JdfSanYqKBw7iXmPjodGDdr18=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
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  71. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJps2erD2H-GJ2EL-Gzdz5a4vvKreNfVRJA4nOyFfF44mv54rZCOxrGi-2LJjXYBJVi1wVbYUtyIssvRc2v0zLhP3QrK9qjXQvvk-h7TYrLcttPOaVYxaFNMwC0oJ6BjNI1orIlftpqNvj_RdO6ITbtXzJOr0eYUcbUI06JNlYqisaQnZ7baPt8fPUI8ccnJA9hp9sVLjsOqgrM=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  72. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpslFqOeYDkQRME3vcr9FUW1DOhh0Vuzj2vLr_kNM44dFeEHtddzBKgM-O6VaxhHosX3tr90K-aOYu3nniCujljAFDu43b0DzXovnorEgYEXaw0QdpH9wyyBHZY7c3xtVk3nzZhRHyNrwwtCSUM7k8K2xWpcFR362-3yhSZSJi0a-C1awksxYayQw==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  73. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJps55y_gS1d4IHHWMLNdLETdWT3kfxiBLp4mxhJnRubAt2cM63OFc_VPm9_Y5CoZVXgr9xEDo4SI_4M24VxwfiseZV4mU6XxAYCJZ9CouzHpB-tVL1dMA0MyMPpAlW83Iqj-PA5xRax3y_XyLGAeZnv0Iscib0Qw9yJ-oVNTsDNgsy5UUKWdMVTYWJVwr9NE978&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  74. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsENI3lZVrIwchULZwj8d8JQ-18sj5p1O31apKOj9kqGR4Z4FEqNPN6ObNtIAWX6cbwo2LgIWIuf7FMsjl4eF-SNbyzKt07qLyDaLzMx9zAimE_W1wrrTZFRjeyKEQnIm5xBL-lC0ktgNzM00xPiK1WrHmBmcsVTzw0rIYXhegQAg=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  75. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVsz1du0ZimaobJvhgzK_Vl1H94_dAaWw070C8OwSeHi8UvY6oSXu5LyJdA7lGtTqXf4bMvJUQC-0_IXNSNksRSnumscjqCPBRZbfP6R0XLIeJge_6DWHl24a4uxvKIGj4LU28lTpF7lnv6JFbH7LXXpc4BDpVwdPoeai1XM9MKtwDalNHk3DNCA9AZBFaN8hNIp&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  76. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl3xcztWb4iyDxhqEDDEgtVQFKki39ylfJaDJiqFkR3DkDfjRt8NBVxd6KKrlHaohvtNZNaiB8UmLH5J6o5UIc_HuAcS1X6AF0sQvZqYKbLWC901UB5qML5-zFa21u5g837Tq-bARZgfKDHXB3Valq6LlrExEdFxHpw==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  77. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl34W-2p3ZVszdozMPn6JdjWh4VRpcz8jcLxgOxDyykJybXdthF79nbduMdunV74quFa4Hfy61Ov6Bwe4CAx38rf8uk1ZNa_kqGNegSdiY9Y_IbRE0q_ks6R498mrMP7ypfJTFLr1gMV0lzGqVSbXH3pC5a7H5oOePjukENTC62tlnorL6GlTOM0=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  78. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsqAmn_UoF2L_cQ7toqesGvHVhofRpw4_OTSCjonrMMTfNlsJ3OKgb9fcZsSQbfZElBoaZQXjLbV7DRhCVQtnpK_yGezfuVhWkgwggn_4qz2P1FGdpwNXf-SToJc-VSb2CqGYwRPycMDIgtP8GItjh39cjX-3WFcFHouXw13XT7mU=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  79. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl1ZlK0qdTJpsdrzyUvd9HIrSyiRq9ZO_qKuDe7MQMT9PGre_ahx_hfdTGO_3JrzP3krENsV-hKSHx1YW8snLpTiQKn09LXt1pqGivX-68iO6wMHNJb12uUqtCSEOV97ZfNvd8EziDLtvt9p0uZChhpYr90Dg2BL-vQ==&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  80. mailto:nisohq at niso.org
  81. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOEaqDEZETq7NcBlFM0yI_kcm4UUfJmk91fi8c-gvdOSadFwbTJqlev_tZF7xrFaNt89G6ZchEFDQvlOFsPWoe6HjNwjWWQXY1m4qeN3JKUp8A=&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==
  82. https://visitor.constantcontact.com/do?p=un&m=001vxR5oH7oJeHq5TUcqRW79g%3D%3D&ch=947f7fa0-9a90-11e5-a61e-d4ae52733bf0&ca=78b65d34-7b9a-4e70-b6e3-287d2f8f665a
  83. http://ui.constantcontact.com/sa/fwtf.jsp?llr=pfqy5luab&m=1121387823279&ea=needleman_mark%40yahoo.com&a=1126311254228
  84. https://visitor.constantcontact.com/do?p=oo&m=001vxR5oH7oJeHq5TUcqRW79g%3D%3D&ch=947f7fa0-9a90-11e5-a61e-d4ae52733bf0&ca=78b65d34-7b9a-4e70-b6e3-287d2f8f665a
  85. http://www.constantcontact.com/legal/service-provider?cc=about-service-provider
  86. mailto:nisohq at niso.org
  87. http://www.constantcontact.com/index.jsp?cc=BasicWLC
  88. http://www.constantcontact.com/index.jsp?cc=BasicWLC

   Hidden links:
  89. http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001s1yuqKmHYZmwyvy5fqlYSlpD929PdlIp67jjNN4MT-SVpFE7mT2gl_KTR5GyulOETCvZ_y583R3zfwU9-21xlLv3U7Fuq60Ipcwf_GPb1enFjipzGZKCtkZ9ECdp4g2n7btRtcq4DTVDcaYgmUJmKKrAbC5JpWBk&c=BMHya4awe3OcJj1quQt6wOViZS8gW2LH3Qt4BF6_eg5pG49So6fsjg==&ch=MywDDUuxC9s7CmAP2-iZC8RcLhf6i_ct-qc2UkBea9roxtj6pyrWSg==


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