Like Sal said, it pays to research things with RC papers. OB's are bad news, you don't want those, the're fugitive. With fine art papers, they tell you about this up front (there won't be any OB's in those). With photographic papers, you may need to dig deeper to get the correct info. If the prints are facing a window and get regular exposure, even w/ the glass window and glass on a framed print, all bets are off. That's not a good idea.
See the stuff below that I copied and pasted from a research site after wading through lots and lots of reading. This is their conclusion, and it is very interesting, and very scary. The last two sentences grab your attention, especially if you like to lie on the beach for hours in the sun. Free radicals, molecular rearranging, whoa!
"By analyzing the ultraviolet spectrometer, it was found that the damage occurred in the form of dissociation in the double bonds and the bonds of the salts that make up the gelatin molecule, i.e. an almost noticeable breakdown in the protein structure of gelatin.
While FTIR analysis confirmed that gelatin is somewhat resistant to ultraviolet rays in the short term, the effect of long-term UV accumulation can be observed because of rearranging the molecular network of gelatin, as UV rays encourage radicals. The free gelatin molecule has a role in rearranging the molecular structure of individual gelatin molecules"