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Mark J. Stefik

Researcher at PARC

Publications -  221
Citations -  17175

Mark J. Stefik is an academic researcher from PARC. The author has contributed to research in topics: Parking guidance and information & Topic model. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 220 publications receiving 16487 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark J. Stefik include Stanford University & Xerox.

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Patent

System for controlling the distribution and use of digital works

TL;DR: In this article, a system for controlling use and distribution of digital works, in which the owner of a digital work attaches usage rights to that work, is presented, where each right has associated with it certain optional specifications which outline the conditions and fees upon which the right may be exercised.
Patent

System for controlling the distribution and use of digital works having attached usage rights where the usage rights are defined by a usage rights grammar

TL;DR: In this article, a system for controlling use and distribution of digital works is presented, which allows the owner of a digital work to attach usage rights to their work, which define how the individual digital work may be used and distributed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the chalkboard: computer support for collaboration and problem solving in meetings

TL;DR: The Colab meeting room at Xerox PARC as mentioned in this paper has been created to study computer support of collaborative problem solving in face-to-face meetings, and the long-term goal is to understand how to build computer tools to make meetings more effective.
Patent

System for controlling the distribution and use of digital works using digital tickets

TL;DR: In this paper, a system for controlling the distribution and use of digital works using digital tickets is presented, where a digital ticket is used to entitle the ticket holder to exercise some usage right with respect to a digital work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planning with constraints

TL;DR: This paper presents an approach to hierarchical planning, termed constraint posting, that uses constraints to represent the interactions between subproblems and is illustrated with a computer program that plans gene-cloning experiments in molecular genetics.