The worldâs largest library catalogue, WorldCat, is suing Clarivate to stop the global analytics company from creating a free rival product that, it claims, would âstealâ its scholarly materials to âfurther consolidate [Clarivateâs] dominant positionâ in online library services.
In a made at an Ohio court, the owner of WorldCat, which provides access to more than 500 million references to 4 billion books, essays and other reference materials, says plans by Clarivate to establish a âfree and open community peer-to-peer sharing platform for metadata created and owned by librariesâ are contingent on the âmisappropriatingâ of a catalogue it has spent decades collating at a cost of tens of millions of dollars.
It calls for a temporary restraining order on the proposed MetaDoor platform, which has been set up as a âdirect competitorâ to WorldCat, as well as seeking âpunitive damagesâ of at least $75,000 (ÂŁ61,000).
Under WorldCatâs business model, libraries upload descriptions of the records they hold, allowing researchers to find rare or obscure materials around the world. Access to the bibliographic database is free, but WorldCatâs owner, Online Computer Library Center (OCLC), also offers subscription-based services such as resource-sharing to its 32,000 institutional members â with the database directly accounting for 40Â per cent of its revenues and 83Â per cent indirectly.
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In court documents obtained by the US library site , OCLC â a not-for-profit operation that employs about 1,200 people, mainly in Ohio â claims that Clarivate and its subsidiary businesses, Clarivate Analytics, ProQuest and Ex Libris, have âchosen to take shortcuts by using the MetaDoor platform to misappropriate catalog records and metadata created by OCLC, its members, and othersâ, rather than develop their own unique reference database.
In practice, this has seen the defendants âproviding OCLCâs WorldCat records to MetaDoor users without requiring those users to subscribe to use WorldCat or otherwise pay OCLC for those recordsâ, the claim adds.
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This represents the company âtortiously interfering with OCLCâs prospective business relationshipsâ â a claim that Clarivate denied, saying the âlawsuit is without merit, and we will vigorously defend our positionâ.
However, OCLC claims that the new platform is entirely dependent on universities and academic collections uploading their WorldCat references on to MetaDoor, stating that Clarivateâs âpredatory behaviourâ in encouraging this sharing of metadata would cause âdevastatingâ harm to its business.
The âdefendants know that without being able to steal valuable WorldCat records, MetaDoor will not surviveâ, the court documents state, adding that âMetaDoorâs entire structure is built on the back of WorldCat and the more than five decades worth of work and hundreds of millions of dollars invested by OCLC to create itâ.
The creation of the free library catalogue is, OCLC claims, ânot purely altruisticâ and is âinsteadâŠ[the] latest attempt to further consolidate [Clarivateâs] dominant position in the [integrated library systems/library services provider] marketâ, it adds, stating that the âprofit-sacrificing behaviour [is designed] to ultimately drive OCLC (and potentially its other competitors) from the ILS/LSP marketâ.
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The âdefendants are likely to succeed unless they are stopped from pursuing their current course of wrongful actionsâ, the lawsuit adds.
In , Clarivate said it was âdeveloping a community-based platform to allow librarians and information experts at museums, educational establishments, cultural and scholarly organisations and more, to freely and easily collaborate to enrich and share metadata to surface and expose their own bibliographic resources and content to a global audienceâ.
âIt will be open to any organisation of all sizes and type. All records shared will be available under an appropriate open licence, to allow records to be copied and used in original or modified form,â it added, stating that it âsupports library commitments to open up access to metadata via sharingâ.
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