DCS Frequently Asked Questions (Republic of Ireland) For HEIs based in the Republic of Ireland. What is the relationship between CLA and ICLA? CLA and ICLA are both not-for-profit Reprographic Rights Organisations (RROs) representing rights owners in the UK and Ireland respectively. We work closely together in matters of licensing, pooling repertoire in each others’ licences. How many HEIs use the DCS? In the UK, 147 HEIs use the DCS, which is almost 77% of the HE sector. Over 90% automated their reporting to the CLA through the DCS last year. In Ireland, we currently have four users: University College Cork, Dublin City University, University of Limerick and Marino Institute of Education. Is the DCS compliant with the ICLA Licence? CLA and ICLA have worked closely together to ensure that the DCS is fully compliant with the ICLA HE Licence. What does automating your reporting mean? RROs require usage data in order to fairly distribute licensing fees to publishers, authors and visual creators. Every year, all HEIs are required to report on the content they have digitised, as a condition of their CLA or ICLA licence. Providing all digitisations are stored within the DCS, the HEI does not need to fill out any paperwork – the report is generated directly from the DCS. Automating your reporting alleviates a huge administrative burden at the end of the academic year, and allows RROs to allocate their fees fairly to creators. What is the shared (“crowdsourced”) repository? All users of the DCS can upload their own scans in response to digitisation requests from lecturers. Providing these scans are covered under the CLA/ICLA licence, these are made available for other HEIs to use as an alternative to scanning, as long as they already own the material in question. This means that all DCS users have access to over 450,000 digitised book and journal extracts, saving your library teams time scanning and organising files. If the extract you need is not available, you can upload your own content ready for other HEIs to share, or order it through EHESS (see below). The more HEIs that use the DCS, the richer the repository becomes. What is Born Digital Content? The DCS also hosts over 290,000 publisher-supplied book titles. This content is in print-ready PDF form, providing the best online reading experience for your students. Eighteen publishers are currently represented: Taylor and Francis, Springer Nature, Wiley, University of California Press, Boydell & Brewer, Bristol University Press, Kogan Page, Amber Books, Pearson, Faber & Faber, University of Wales Press, Wordsworth Editions, Arcturus, Burleigh Dodds Science, Canbury Press, Polity, Authentic Media and Jacaranda. This list is evolving, and new content is added regularly. As with other items in the shared repository, an HEI will need to own the material if they wish to use a born digital extract in reading lists. What about using the British Library’s EHESS service? In partnership with CLA, ICLA are making the EHESS service available to Irish HEIs with all the benefits of reduced cost and streamlined workflow. EHESS orders are charged on a per-order basis. What integrations are available? The DCS integrates with six major Library Management Systems: ExLibris Alma, SirsiDynix Symphony, Capita Alto, OCLC Worldshare, Innovative Sierra and PTFS Koha. Integrations are quick and easy to set up and allow automatic checks of ownership of material in your library catalogue. The DCS also integrates with 4 major Reading List Management Systems: ExLibris Leganto, Talis Aspire, Kortext Keylinks and SirsiDynix BLUECloud. With an integration, digitisation requests can be made directly from the reading list itself, with links to students shared automatically, saving library teams time copying and pasting links to VLEs or other reading lists. None of these integrations are essential. The DCS still works, and users can benefit from the shared repository, even if an institution doesn’t integrate with any of the above. The DCS offers an integrated student reader to give your students a full online reading and learning experience, with the option to print and download. The reader is provided by Kortext, and students can create or sign into the reader with their Kortext credentials to access advanced features such as highlighting, bookmarking and email notes. What authentication methods are available? Students will need to authenticate in order to view the content you share via the DCS. HEIs can choose from EZProxy, Shibboleth or, OpenAthens, as well as IP authentication for on campus access. If your HEI does not use any of these methods, we can set you up with manual authentication. Who uses the DCS? Library and digitization teams do. Lecturers, tutors and students will never see the DCS interface, only the links shared on reading lists or VLEs. CLA’s dedicated DCS team will provide library teams with a full demo of the DCS and walk you through how to make requests based on your HEI’s preferences. They will also help you set up any integrations you may be interested in using. What is needed for me to onboard to the DCS? Onboarding onto the DCS is very easy. We just need some information about your authentication, library management and any reading list management systems. If you already have digital copies created under your ICLA HE Licence, we can bulk upload these into the DCS for you. The DCS team at the CLA will guide you through the onboarding process, from start to finish. Is there a fee for using the DCS? Yes, the DCS has a simple annual subscription fee for the use of the platform. Who do I contact for a demo and more information? Please contact the DCS team at the CLA via this email address: InTouch@cla.co.uk