February 25, 2025

Call for Interoperable Ebook Standards in the Academic Book Market

We welcome signatories from academic institutions to a new Interoperable Ebooks Standards Statement that affirms the reading choices of all individuals and support choice in the academic marketplace through the use of standards and best practices for academic publishing, library infrastructure and library lending

The current list of signatories, which includes representatives from a variety of major academic institutions, is available on our website. In an information environment in which content is increasingly siloed and libraries are prevented from fulfilling their traditional roles of acquiring, preserving, and lending ebooks through restrictive and expensive licensing agreements, interoperability and shared standards are more crucial than ever.

We call for an academic ebook market that provides a consistent, non-fragmented user experience, one where vendors use the kinds of open, interoperable standards that have formed best practices for information sharing online for decades. We seek an ebook environment that provides

  1. Ease of Discovery - consistent open metadata using open, universal standards such as OPDS to facilitate discovery, access and use. OPDS allows publishers to syndicate (update regularly) information about available titles in a way that current metadata protocols handle only with difficulty.
  2. Ease of Use - innovation in developing and employing DRM systems, such as Readium LCP,  that use open standards to facilitate interoperable, systematic integration and delivery when access control is necessary
  3. Easier to Buy - growth of the overall library marketplace and increased author impact by simplifying the  acquisition and use of ebooks
  4. Accessible for Every Reader - options for ebook accessibility through interoperability with accessible readers and accessibility tools.

We hope you and your institutions will join us in preserving ebook access for now and for generations to come.

The statement was written by Robert Cartolano, Associate Vice President, Technology and Preservation for Columbia University Libraries and William Maltarich, Interim Associate Dean for Collections and Content Strategy; Head, Collection Development.

Sign the statement

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