CCC reached out to multiple information management professionals to gain a better understanding of the ways in which they are incorporating tools with AI capabilities into their workflow.
The Women’s Edge and The Boston Globe announce that CCC was named to their annual Top 100 Women-Led Businesses in Massachusetts list in 2024.
As AI systems, particularly generative AI, become more sophisticated, they challenge our traditional notions of creativity and copyright.
Excerpts, poems, newspaper and magazine articles, and other shorter texts create a bridge for students to make a connection between themselves and the core curriculum.
Every year, millions of requests for content are placed by researchers using CCC’s document delivery service. The vast majority of items requested are made available to researchers in seconds, but there are times when researchers require content that isn’t so readily available.
As powerful AI tools become more integrated into daily operations, a critical question looms: How do we ensure responsible and legal use of these groundbreaking technologies?
As AI technologies continue to gain traction, pending lawsuits and legal uncertainty around the globe highlight the need to respect copyright law while leveraging the power of Artificial Intelligence.
IEEE needed a solution to disambiguate its data so it could map authors and documents to the correct organization and improve data-driven decision-making.
This past summer, CCC hosted “Camp OA,” a series of community forums in which publishers could dive deep into technology, publishing models, and workflows.
To instill the love of reading in students, a personal connection must be made—students need to relate to what they are reading.