- From: Tony Barry <tony@info.anu.edu.au>
- Date: Tue, 14 Nov 1995 12:14:30 +1100
- To: www-talk@w3.org
At 1:14 AM 14/11/95, Stephen Turner wrote: We carry with us the expectations of print and forget that these expectations may be limitations. >It's an interesting question though, because of the potentially transient >nature of the resource (not even 'potentially' for news). Electronic journals >are going to have to make sure that a single canonical version of each paper >exists, and that it always stays in the same place. One could ask why. I as an author may find a cheaper place to mount my information and if I want others to find it I'll try and get it registered at appropraite sites and picked up by the web robots. Having it stay in one place where the author cannot control it is a limitation of print. > It should not be altered >or corrected after publication. Not being able to update and correct publications if a fault of print not a virtue that should be emulated. If I as an author publish something on a server I want to be able to improve it or withdraw it if I no longer feel that it represents my views. If somebody has archived a previous version so that they can cite my views at a previous time the maintenance of that copy become their responsibility but the currenmt version belongs to the author. >Although electronic means provide an excellent >medium for adding later notes and referring to later papers, there should be >a page that refers to the paper and which also links to later notes. But I >digress. I have a paper (which is I don't intend to update) which cites a bibliography which I do update. This cites a paper by a second author written well after mine who cites my first paper. Electronic means provide an excellent medium to link to _current_ material even though the citing paper may be years old. You can break the time flow limitation of a static medium like paper. Tony __________________________________________________________________________ Tony Barry URL:http://snazzy.anu.edu.au/People/TonyB.html Centre for Networked Information and Publishing & also Centre for Networked Access to Scholarly Information fone +61 6 249 4632 Australian National University Library phax +61 6 279 8120 Canberra A.C.T. 0200, AUSTRALIA tony@info.anu.edu.au
Received on Monday, 13 November 1995 20:12:29 UTC