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Christina Pikas Christina K. Pikas is a science and engineering librarian in a special library as well as a doctoral student in information studies.
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Why this information industry land grab is different

Category: Information Sciencepublishing
Posted on: July 15, 2010 10:03 PM, by Christina Pikas

And why we should care. Gary Price of the Resource Shelf pointed to a news story today, that Ebsco has acquired two more research databases: Criminal Justice Abstracts and Communications Abstracts. For those of you who haven't been following, Ebsco has recently acquired Ageline (it is now not available for free), NetLibrary, research databases from OCLC, The Music Index Online, World Textiles, ExPub (ChemExpert)... oh and exclusive rights to some magazines.

What we can expect from this is that those other databases will no longer be available on multiple platforms. Folks who aren't librarians might not know that there are database producers and then those who sell the interfaces. The producer gets the articles and then has humans read them and assign terms from controlled vocabularies ( or has machines do the same). In the past, you could pick both - there might be two or three, say, kinesiology databases, and these might each be available on 3-4 platforms. The platforms were like DIALOG, FirstSearch, Ovid (SP and others), EbscoHost, Illumina (from CSA), Web of Knowledge, and maybe some others. 

There would also be a couple different research databases on the same subject, so you could get the one with the best coverage, the best indexing, and the get it on the platform that worked the best. Ebsco has been pulling the things they've purchased from other platforms, first of all. Second, they are buying multiple databases covering the same area, so there's some thought that these will probably be combined at some point. So we're left with one database on one platform. Ebsco host seems to be doing *all* the buying - so if we can't get along with them, then we're screwed. If they want to jack their prices up. Well guess.

Ben Wagner maintains and others ask if this is a death spiral for Abstracting & Indexing services. We *know* that these tools are necessary for a thorough search of the literature - Google is ok for a few good items, but you can't be comprehensive with it.

Or, is this a necessary down-select to separate the strong from the weak? Will the few that make it through this be enough and will this enable them to consolidate and persevere?

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Comments

1

This post got featured in American Libraries Direct, so you will probably get a bunch-o hits on this via http://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/al_direct/07212010 Congrats!

Good post BTW.

Posted by: Joe | July 22, 2010 1:07 PM

2

Saw that, thanks!

Posted by: Christina Pikas Author Profile Page | July 22, 2010 1:21 PM

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