Announcement Reauthorizing Copyright Public Modernization Committee, 40512-40513 [2024-10243]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Notices
feedback to the Library on the
technology-related aspects of the
Copyright Office’s modernization
initiative, including both Copyright
Office IT systems and broader Library IT
systems that interface with and/or
support Copyright Office operations.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
[Docket No. 2024–1]
Announcement Reauthorizing
Copyright Public Modernization
Committee
Library of Congress.
Notice of reauthorizing IT
modernization public stakeholder
committee.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Library of Congress is
reauthorizing a public committee to
provide a forum for the technologyrelated aspects of the U.S. Copyright
Office’s modernization initiative. Given
the success of the previous Copyright
Public Modernization Committee
(CPMC) and the value and insights
provided by CPMC members, the
Library wants to renew the committee
for an additional term. Therefore, the
Library will accept applications from
qualified members of the public to serve
on this committee. Membership will be
on a volunteer basis, with the
expectation of participation in at least
two virtual or hybrid open forums a year
at the member’s own expense.
DATES: Applications must be submitted
on or before June 18, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Applications may be
submitted electronically to the CPMC’s
dedicated email inbox at cpmc@loc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Neil
D. Bernstein, Program Analyst, Office of
the Chief Information Officer, by
telephone at 202–707–9319 or by email
at cpmc@loc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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I. Background
The Library of Congress will
reauthorize and form a public
committee on Copyright Office
information technology (IT)
modernization. The committee will be
managed by the Office of the Chief
Information Officer (OCIO), with
support from the U.S. Copyright Office
and from other Library offices as
necessary. The goal of the committee
will be to expand and enhance
communication with external
stakeholders on IT modernization of
Copyright Office systems and to provide
an ongoing public forum for sharing
information and answering questions
related to this initiative. The scope of
contributions made by the committee
are limited to the specific topics set
forth in this notice.
II. Public Stakeholder Committee
Subjects of Discussion
Members of the Copyright Public
Modernization Committee will provide
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19:15 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
III. Public Stakeholder Committee
Application Process
Members of the public who seek to
participate in the Copyright Public
Modernization Committee should
submit a current curriculum vitae and a
statement of interest of no more than
1000 words addressing the questions
identified below no later than June 18,
2024. Members who served on the
previous Committee are eligible to
reapply for membership but must
submit a new application. Applications
can be submitted via email at cpmc@
loc.gov. If you are unable to access a
computer or the internet, please contact
the Library using the contact
information above for special
instructions. Individuals selected for
participation will be notified directly by
the Library not later than September 6,
2024. In order to accommodate the
expected level of interest, the Library
expects to assign no more than one
representative per organization to the
committee.
The public stakeholder committee
will have a limited number of seats, and
the application and selection process
are expected to be competitive. The
Library will seek to select a membership
that is representative of the broad and
diverse Copyright Office stakeholder
community. The areas of relevant
expertise for membership include skill
in communicating on complex technical
issues; the ability to work
collaboratively; and familiarity with
technology relevant to Copyright Office
services.
IV. Questions for Statement of Interest
For the Statement of Interest, the
applicant need not address every subject
identified below, but the Library
requests that applicants clearly identify
and separately address each numbered
subject for which a response is
submitted. Answers will be evaluated
by the Library to select a committee
with members that represent the
broadest possible cross-section of
Copyright Office stakeholders.
1. An important skill for members of
the CPMC is the ability to communicate,
whether orally or in writing, on
complex technological issues, including
describing their impact on the needs or
interests of Copyright Office
stakeholders. Please identify any
relevant experience you have working
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and communicating on technological
issues with these or any other relevant
parties:
(a) Individual creators and copyright
owners;
(b) Large corporate creators and
companies that own or manage
copyrights;
(c) Small-to-medium size enterprises
that own or manage copyrights;
(d) Creators, copyright owners, or
copyright users from the following
sectors: photography, motion picture,
musical works, sound recordings,
graphic arts, publishing, software, and
information technology;
(e) users of Copyright Office services,
including but not limited to individuals
or entities that register their works with
the Office, record copyright-related
documents with the Office, or benefit
from or pay into the licensing systems
administered by the Copyright Office;
(f) user interest groups, including
researchers, universities, archives, and
libraries; and
(g) representatives of the public and
public interest groups (including
organizations involved in issues related
to open government, public government
data and APIs, and government use of
technology).
2. Another important skill for
members of the CPMC is the ability to
work collaboratively with others,
including diverse stakeholders. Please
describe any relevant past experience
developing and maintaining
relationships with a variety of
individuals; communicating effectively
about topics involving interdependencies, competing priorities, and
diverse audiences/user groups; or
reaching a consensus among diverse
stakeholders with conflicting interests.
3. A key skill that the Library is
seeking in members of the CPMC is
familiarity with the technology relevant
to the Copyright Office and the Office’s
recent IT initiatives. Please describe any
relevant experience in the following
sectors: government innovation and/or
technology, copyright law and
Copyright Office services, rights
management, and the development and
use of IT systems in library, cultural
heritage, museum, creative industry or
other settings.
4. Please describe your knowledge of
user-centered strategies and design
methods, including any experience
applying iterative design principles to
solving complex problems.
5. If your application is endorsed by
other stakeholders or associations,
please identify them.
E:\FR\FM\10MYN1.SGM
10MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Notices
Dated: May 7, 2024.
Carla D. Hayden,
Librarian of Congress.
[FR Doc. 2024–10243 Filed 5–9–24; 8:45 am]
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NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Comment Request; Grantee
Reporting Requirements for the
Engineering Research Centers
National Science Foundation.
Submission for OMB review;
comment request.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The National Science
Foundation (NSF) has submitted the
following information collection
requirement to OMB for review and
clearance under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. This is the
second notice for public comment; the
first was published in the Federal
Register, and no comments were
received. NSF is forwarding the
proposed submission to the Office of
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clearance simultaneously with the
publication of this second notice.
DATES: Written comments and
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Officer, National Science Foundation,
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VA 22314, or send email to splimpto@
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8339, which is accessible 24 hours a
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(including federal holidays).
Copies of the submission may be
obtained by calling 703–292–7556.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NSF may
not conduct or sponsor a collection of
information unless the collection of
information displays a currently valid
OMB control number and the agency
informs potential persons who are to
respond to the collection of information
that such persons are not required to
respond to the collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
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SUMMARY:
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19:15 May 09, 2024
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Title of Collection: Grantee Reporting
Requirements for the Engineering
Research Centers.
OMB Number: 3145–0220.
Type of Request: Extension without
revision of an information collection.
Type of Request: Intent to seek
approval to renew an information
collection.
Abstract: The Engineering Research
Centers (ERC) program supports an
integrated, interdisciplinary research
environment to advance fundamental
engineering knowledge and engineered
systems; educate a globally competitive
and diverse engineering workforce from
K–12 on; and join academe and industry
in partnership to achieve these goals.
ERCs conduct world-class research
through partnerships of academic
institutions, national laboratories,
industrial organizations, and/or other
public/private entities. New knowledge
thus created is meaningfully linked to
society.
ERCs conduct world-class research
with an engineered systems perspective
that integrates materials, devices,
processes, components, control
algorithms and/or other enabling
elements to perform a well-defined
function. These systems provide a
unique academic research and
education experience that involves
integrative complexity and
technological realization. The
complexity of the systems perspective
includes the factors associated with its
use in industry, society/environment, or
the human body.
ERCs enable and foster excellent
education, integrate research and
education, speed knowledge/technology
transfer through partnerships between
academe and industry, and prepare a
more competitive future workforce.
ERCs capitalize on diversity through
participation in center activities and
demonstrate leadership in the
involvement of groups
underrepresented in science and
engineering.
Centers are required to submit annual
reports on progress and plans, which
will be used as a basis for performance
review and determining the level of
continued funding. To support this
review and the management of a Center,
ERCs also are required to submit
management and performance
indicators annually to NSF via a data
collection website that is managed by a
technical assistance contractor. These
indicators are both quantitative and
descriptive and may include, for
example, the characteristics of center
personnel and students; sources of cash
and in-kind support; expenditures by
operational component; characteristics
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40513
of industrial and/or other sector
participation; research activities;
education activities; knowledge transfer
activities; patents, licenses;
publications; degrees granted to
students involved in Center activities;
descriptions of significant advances and
other outcomes of the ERC effort. Such
reporting requirements will be included
in the cooperative agreement which is
binding between the academic
institution and the NSF.
Each Center’s annual report will
address the following categories of
activities: (1) vision and impact, (2)
strategic plan, (3) research program, (4)
innovation ecosystem and industrial
collaboration, (5) education, (6)
infrastructure (leadership, management,
facilities, diversity) and (7) budget
issues.
For each of the categories the report
will describe overall objectives for the
year, progress toward center goals,
problems the Center has encountered in
making progress towards goals and how
they were overcome, plans for the future
and anticipated research and other
barriers to overcome in the following
year, and specific outputs and
outcomes.
Use of the Information: The data
collected will be used for NSF internal
reports, historical data, performance
review by peer site visit teams, program
level studies and evaluations, and for
securing future funding for continued
ERC program maintenance and growth.
Estimate of Burden: 150 hours per
center for 17 centers for a total of 2550
hours.
Respondents: Academic institutions.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Report: One from each of the 17 ERCs.
Dated: May 7, 2024.
Suzanne H. Plimpton,
Reports Clearance Officer, National Science
Foundation.
[FR Doc. 2024–10268 Filed 5–9–24; 8:45 am]
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In accordance with the purposes of
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the Advisory Committee on Reactor
Safeguards (ACRS) will hold meetings
on June 5–7, 2024. The Committee will
be conducting meetings that will
include some Members being physically
present at the NRC while other Members
E:\FR\FM\10MYN1.SGM
10MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 92 (Friday, May 10, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40512-40513]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-10243]
[[Page 40512]]
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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
[Docket No. 2024-1]
Announcement Reauthorizing Copyright Public Modernization
Committee
AGENCY: Library of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of reauthorizing IT modernization public stakeholder
committee.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Library of Congress is reauthorizing a public committee to
provide a forum for the technology-related aspects of the U.S.
Copyright Office's modernization initiative. Given the success of the
previous Copyright Public Modernization Committee (CPMC) and the value
and insights provided by CPMC members, the Library wants to renew the
committee for an additional term. Therefore, the Library will accept
applications from qualified members of the public to serve on this
committee. Membership will be on a volunteer basis, with the
expectation of participation in at least two virtual or hybrid open
forums a year at the member's own expense.
DATES: Applications must be submitted on or before June 18, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Applications may be submitted electronically to the CPMC's
dedicated email inbox at [email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Neil D. Bernstein, Program Analyst,
Office of the Chief Information Officer, by telephone at 202-707-9319
or by email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Library of Congress will reauthorize and form a public
committee on Copyright Office information technology (IT)
modernization. The committee will be managed by the Office of the Chief
Information Officer (OCIO), with support from the U.S. Copyright Office
and from other Library offices as necessary. The goal of the committee
will be to expand and enhance communication with external stakeholders
on IT modernization of Copyright Office systems and to provide an
ongoing public forum for sharing information and answering questions
related to this initiative. The scope of contributions made by the
committee are limited to the specific topics set forth in this notice.
II. Public Stakeholder Committee Subjects of Discussion
Members of the Copyright Public Modernization Committee will
provide feedback to the Library on the technology-related aspects of
the Copyright Office's modernization initiative, including both
Copyright Office IT systems and broader Library IT systems that
interface with and/or support Copyright Office operations.
III. Public Stakeholder Committee Application Process
Members of the public who seek to participate in the Copyright
Public Modernization Committee should submit a current curriculum vitae
and a statement of interest of no more than 1000 words addressing the
questions identified below no later than June 18, 2024. Members who
served on the previous Committee are eligible to reapply for membership
but must submit a new application. Applications can be submitted via
email at [email protected]. If you are unable to access a computer or the
internet, please contact the Library using the contact information
above for special instructions. Individuals selected for participation
will be notified directly by the Library not later than September 6,
2024. In order to accommodate the expected level of interest, the
Library expects to assign no more than one representative per
organization to the committee.
The public stakeholder committee will have a limited number of
seats, and the application and selection process are expected to be
competitive. The Library will seek to select a membership that is
representative of the broad and diverse Copyright Office stakeholder
community. The areas of relevant expertise for membership include skill
in communicating on complex technical issues; the ability to work
collaboratively; and familiarity with technology relevant to Copyright
Office services.
IV. Questions for Statement of Interest
For the Statement of Interest, the applicant need not address every
subject identified below, but the Library requests that applicants
clearly identify and separately address each numbered subject for which
a response is submitted. Answers will be evaluated by the Library to
select a committee with members that represent the broadest possible
cross-section of Copyright Office stakeholders.
1. An important skill for members of the CPMC is the ability to
communicate, whether orally or in writing, on complex technological
issues, including describing their impact on the needs or interests of
Copyright Office stakeholders. Please identify any relevant experience
you have working and communicating on technological issues with these
or any other relevant parties:
(a) Individual creators and copyright owners;
(b) Large corporate creators and companies that own or manage
copyrights;
(c) Small-to-medium size enterprises that own or manage copyrights;
(d) Creators, copyright owners, or copyright users from the
following sectors: photography, motion picture, musical works, sound
recordings, graphic arts, publishing, software, and information
technology;
(e) users of Copyright Office services, including but not limited
to individuals or entities that register their works with the Office,
record copyright-related documents with the Office, or benefit from or
pay into the licensing systems administered by the Copyright Office;
(f) user interest groups, including researchers, universities,
archives, and libraries; and
(g) representatives of the public and public interest groups
(including organizations involved in issues related to open government,
public government data and APIs, and government use of technology).
2. Another important skill for members of the CPMC is the ability
to work collaboratively with others, including diverse stakeholders.
Please describe any relevant past experience developing and maintaining
relationships with a variety of individuals; communicating effectively
about topics involving inter-dependencies, competing priorities, and
diverse audiences/user groups; or reaching a consensus among diverse
stakeholders with conflicting interests.
3. A key skill that the Library is seeking in members of the CPMC
is familiarity with the technology relevant to the Copyright Office and
the Office's recent IT initiatives. Please describe any relevant
experience in the following sectors: government innovation and/or
technology, copyright law and Copyright Office services, rights
management, and the development and use of IT systems in library,
cultural heritage, museum, creative industry or other settings.
4. Please describe your knowledge of user-centered strategies and
design methods, including any experience applying iterative design
principles to solving complex problems.
5. If your application is endorsed by other stakeholders or
associations, please identify them.
[[Page 40513]]
Dated: May 7, 2024.
Carla D. Hayden,
Librarian of Congress.
[FR Doc. 2024-10243 Filed 5-9-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P