OCLC announced the members of the Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship yesterday, save for a member yet to be announced from the European National Library:
- Christopher Cole (FEDLINK): Associate Director for Technical Services, National Agricultural Library
- Poul Erlandsen (EMEA): Head, Document Access Services and Collection Management, Danish University of Education, National Library of Education
- Pat French (OCLC Western): Manager, Collection and Technical Services, Multnomah County Library
- Clifford A. Lynch: Executive Director, Coalition for Networked Information (CNI)
- Brian E. C. Schottlaender (OCLC Western): The Audrey Geisel University Librarian, UC San Diego Libraries
- Ted Schwitzner (ILLINET): Head, Bibliographic Services Division, Illinois State University, Milner Library
- Roberta Shaffer (FLICC/FEDLINK/LC): Executive Director, Federal Library and Information Center Committee, Library of Congress
- Lamar Veatch (COSLA/SOLINET): State Librarian, Georgia Public Library Service—University System of Georgia
- Elsie Weatherington (SOLINET): Dean, University Library, Virginia State University
- Jennifer Younger (INCOLSA): Edward H. Arnold Director of Hesburgh Libraries, University of Notre Dame
I do not know anyone from this list, nor do I know of them, but I like the that they are drawn from a fairly wide range of libraries. At this point I have every confidence that they will approach their duties with the best of intentions. Theirs will be a challenging task, and one which will be watched and commented on closely.
In the same announcement, OCLC posted an e-mail address for questions and comments: reviewboard@oclc.org . I encourage everyone who has an interest in how the records are to be licensed and/or used to compose their views and send them to the board. Every viewpoint, every arguement, every communication sends a message. The library community created and nurtured OCLC as it exists, the library community created and nurtured the bibliographic records that are at the heart of this matter; the library community should make its wishes known.
found via ResourceShelf