id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt dltj-org-9010 What is known about GetFTR at the end of 2019 | Disruptive Library Technology Jester .html text/html 3308 205 65 Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe's December 10th "Why are Librarians Concerned about GetFTR?" in The Scholarly Kitchen and take note of the follow-up discussion in the comments The Spanish Federation of Associations of Archivists, Librarians, Archaeologists, Museologists and Documentalists (ANABAD)'s December 12th "GetFTR: new publishers service to speed up access to research articles" (original in Spanish, Google Translate to English) As I said in my previous post, I don't know why GetFTR is not engaging in existing cross-community (publisher/technology-supplier/library) organizations to have this discussion. That said, it would be useful for an API call from a library's discovery layer to a publisher's GetFTR endpoint to be able to say, "This is my user. If that were possible, then the Seamless Access Where-Are-You-From service could be bypassed for the GetFTR purpose of determining whether a user's institution has access to an article on the publisher's site. ./cache/dltj-org-9010.html ./txt/dltj-org-9010.txt