[NABS-L] Proof of Purchase

Ignasi Cambra ignasicambra at gmail.com
Tue Jan 16 00:20:19 UTC 2018


Hey Chris,
As far as I remember from when I was in college you only need to purchase a physical copy of the book if your DSS office is literally scanning or brailling it for you. Sometimes they would get a book from the library and start working on it ahead of time, but I still needed to buy it from the bookstore in order for them to be able to send it to me in digital format. Only in those cases was it necessary for them to have a proof of purchase. In other situations such as the ones you described I was never asked to buy them and I really don’t think you have to.
Hope this helps!

Sent from my iPhone

> On 15 Jan 2018, at 23:28, Chris Nusbaum via NABS-L <nabs-l at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hello All:
> 
> I hope this email finds each of you enjoying a smooth start to your spring
> semester! It seems that, on this first day of classes for me, I find myself
> stumped on an accessibility question which I'm hoping you can help with. I
> received an email this morning from my DSS coordinator asking me to provide
> her with a "proof of purchase" for each of my textbooks. She says that
> students who receive alternative accessible copies of books are still
> required to buy the books from the campus bookstore in order to avoid
> copyright infringement on the part of the DSS office. As far as I
> understand, if DSS obtains a book from an accessible online resource such as
> AccessText, Bookshare, or Learning Ally, the Chaffee Amendment would protect
> them from copyright problems. Furthermore, if they get the accessible book
> directly from the book's publisher, the publisher is granting them access to
> the text, which should also protect the college from copyright problems. But
> my DSS coordinator is telling me I still need to buy my books from the
> Campus Store anyway.
> 
> So, can anyone explain how this works? Do I really need to buy the print
> books if I already got them from DSS in an accessible format? If I do need
> to buy them, what do I do with the print books once I get them? It seems
> like it would be a waste to buy a perfectly good book only for it to sit on
> my desk as I read the accessible copy which DSS got somewhere else. I want
> to do all that I need to in order to get access to my textbooks, but I also
> don't want to spend money unnecessarily. Thank you in advance for helping me
> make sense of this.
> 
> Chris Nusbaum
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> NABS-L mailing list
> NABS-L at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nabs-l_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for NABS-L:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nabs-l_nfbnet.org/ignasicambra%40gmail.com




More information about the NABS-L mailing list