| Action | Key |
|---|---|
| Play / Pause | K or space |
| Mute / Unmute | M |
| Toggle fullscreen mode | F |
| Select next subtitles | C |
| Select next audio track | A |
| Toggle automatic slides maximization | V |
| Seek 5s backward | left arrow |
| Seek 5s forward | right arrow |
| Seek 10s backward | shift + left arrow or J |
| Seek 10s forward | shift + right arrow or L |
| Seek 60s backward | control + left arrow |
| Seek 60s forward | control + right arrow |
| Seek 1 frame backward | alt + left arrow |
| Seek 1 frame forward | alt + right arrow |
| Decrease volume | shift + down arrow |
| Increase volume | shift + up arrow |
| Decrease playback rate | < |
| Increase playback rate | > |
| Seek to end | end |
| Seek to beginning | beginning |
Legal scholarship in the United States developed differently than legal scholarship in other parts of the world or other scholarship in the United States. These differences have led to the wide availability of journal articles on the internet without paywalls, but without the hallmarks of Open Access publications in other fields. Journals may hold a copyright on these articles, signed over by the author. Very few are licensed for reuse. And it is difficult to know what the policies are because the journals rarely post them publicly. This presentation will discuss the current state of Open Access in US legal journals and the challenges resulting from the lack of clear policies from the journals.
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