Friday, November 30, 2007

Open Access Scientific Publishing

Open Access Scientific Publishing

Posted in Chemspy by chemspy on the November 28th, 2007

Imperial College’s Bob MacCallum runs an interesting site called Compare Stuff, which I’ve reviewed on various occasions elsewhere. Recently, he started blogging about some of the interesting results that emerge when you compare search engine hit rates for different terms against each other. One of the most interesting comparisons was run using the terms “open access” versus “journal”.

The results produce an intriguing chart in which there appear to be far more mentions of bioinformatics in the context of the term journal and open access compared with, say, maths, astronomy, or psychology. As MacCallum is bioinformaticist he says that this makes sense as many of the leading figures in the open access movement come from this field. However, physicists and computer scientists have been enormously active, if less vocal, about OA, so it is odd that those two fields do not show up quite so sharpy. What about open access chemistry, you say? Hmmmm.

Give MacCallum’s Compare Stuff site a try, it’s quite amazing what charts you can make. I just tried Organic versus Inorganic in the context of “emotions”. It looks like organic and inorganic are equally stressful but leave few people anxious, scared, lonely, happy, jealous, angry or sad.

Even The First Copyright 'Pirates' Didn't Do Much Harm

Even The First Copyright 'Pirates' Didn't Do Much Harm

from the learn-your-history dept

Since the original meaning and purpose of intellectual property laws has become so distorted these days, it is quite useful to look back at the history of such things and why they were put in place. That's why we often talk about the debates on intellectual property held by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. It's why we bring up things like the problem of patent sharks in the nineteenth century. The more you look, the more you realize that many of the big "problems" people insist are happening today in the intellectual property world really aren't all that different than things that happened in the past.

William Patry has been posting a few interesting posts lately on historical views of copyright -- but even more interesting is an article in Toronto's Globe and Mail, where the author discusses the first known case of someone copying another's writings being referred to as a "pirate." It was apparently first used in 1701 to describe people who had copied a poem by Daniel Defoe, called "The True-Born Englishman" in order to sell it themselves. The most interesting part: Defoe actually learned how to take advantage of the situation, rather than whining about it. If only today's copyright holders could learn what Defoe figured out 300 years ago.

It is true that Defoe was upset... but not at people copying and making money off of his work. He was upset that they made mistakes in copying his poem. He published a corrected version, noting:

"I should have been concerned at its being printed again and again by pirates, as they call them, and paragraph-men; but would that they do it justice and print it true according to the copy, they are welcome to sell it for a penny if they please."
Defoe quickly realized that obscurity was a much bigger threat than "piracy" and by encouraging these "pirates" to sell copies of his work, it built up his own reputation and allowed him to go around the cumbersome publishing process of the time. The rest of Defoe's career was then built off of his name recognition since that poem was so widely distributed, allowing him the ability to make much more money off of future works. In other words, even the original "victim" of "piracy" quickly recognized how it could be used to his advantage, rather than worrying that it was a threat.

Call to relax copyright laws

Call to relax copyright laws

Change to intellectual property laws would act as a spur to innovation, says genetics expert

Neon Kelly, Computing, 29 Nov 2007
Picture of the British Library
The British Library is hosting a series of debates on intellectual property

Reformed intellectual property (IP) laws and the promotion of open source would fuel innovation and improve UK economic competitiveness, according to a leading genetics researcher.

Relaxing copyright laws will encourage research by allowing access to important data. And the use of open source software in government IT projects would have a similar effect on competition, said Dr Tim Hubbard, head of informatics at Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, at a debate at the British Library last week.

“In the open source model, if a project is not delivering, anyone can take the code and carry on where the previous team left off,” said Hubbard.

“We have competition at the stage where suppliers are bidding, but that is it,” he said.

The Sanger Institute uses open source technology as part of its work for the Human Genome Project, the international movement for genetic research. Open access to the institute’s database has helped fuel its work ethic, said Hubbard.

“We completely expose ourselves ­ if we stop being competitive as a project, people can take our software and work in parallel with us, and if they are better, they will win,” he said. “That puts a lot of pressure on us.”

But the advantages of the open source model in the academic world do not necessarily translate to the business sector, said Ovum analyst Phil Dawson.

“Freedom of choice can lead to an increase in complexity,” said Dawson.

“Academics and people working in the research and development sector are able to support open source components themselves. But in the commercial world, you need a contract for someone controlling the release.

“There are definitely advantages to using open source, but you must always look at the counter arguments and where the cost exposures shift.”

The open systems model can even have the reverse effect and discourage new ideas, according to shadow minister for innovation, universities and skills, Adam Afriye.

“In a historical context, it is the security of tangible property rights that creates the stability in which economic activity takes place,” he said.

Online Library Project Hits 1.5 Million Book Milestone

Online Library Project Hits 1.5 Million Book Milestone

(PC World contributor John Troynousky took a look at today's news from Carnegie Mellon University. Here what he found)

UDL1.jpg

Carnegie Mellon University says it has digitized an astounding 1.5 million books as part of its Universal Digital Library project. The ambitious task, launched in 2002, set out to digitize nothing less than all of humanity's published works. In 1000 years, the plan is, there will be a complete record of all books from the Gutenberg Bible to today's latest romance novel by Danielle Steel.

So far with 1.5 books digitized, the project estimates it's one percent done with a long way to go.

Books are online today and accessible for free through the Universal Digital Library Web site. However I've experienced major headaches trying to access the online library and have received more browser errors than books. I'm guessing this has to do with the media attention the library is getting today that is translating into more Web traffic than the site can handle.

CMU exceeded its original goal of one million books this past April, and it is showing no signs of slowing down. Over 7000 books are scanned across the globe daily, according to CMU. There is, however, something standing in the project's way. Because of copyright concerns over scanned books the program is playing it safe.

What is available today is mostly books that are in the public domain or are books where the copyright holder has given the UDL permission to make a title available. When and if there is a question about a book's copyright only 15 percent of the book is published online – however the entire book is scanned and archived.

My review of the UDL revealed that it is playing it safe indeed. Only 15 percent of the public domain book Alice in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll, for example is available at UDL.

Project director Michael Shamos explained to to CNET in a story it has to play it safe because the project doesn't want to spend the university's endowment for the initiative on legal fees.

Shamos and the UDL are actually less concerned with short term access to books. Their goal is to preserve books for access hundreds of years from now, according the project's mission statement.

I can only hope my ancestors don't have to deal with today's copyright laws.

CMU efforts compete with similar initiatives by Google (Google Book Search), the Internet Archive (Text Archive), and Project Gutenberg.

Blogged with Flock

EU open access push

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20071120/160338.shtml


EU open access push

The European Union has moved towards recommending wider open access publishing, a move hailed as a "step in the right direction" by open access campaigners but provoking concern among publishers. The Council of the EU released a report last week inviting member states to support various open access options including delayed open access journals and research into how scientific information is accessed. According to EU statistics, member states account for 43% of the world’s scientific research.

David Prosser, director of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) Europe, said: "The recommendations could have been stronger but this is a good next step. The really important thing is that this is the first time we have seen actual political support in the EU for open access."

The EU is pushing for a "mandated" open access model to ensure that all publicly funded research is freely available. Some learned societies, such as the Wellcome Trust, already fund mandated OA so that journals can be both peer reviewed and freely available. But publishers are concerned the EU is pushing for an unfunded mandate with delayed open access, where access to journals is exclusive through the publishers for a period of time, after which the articles become completely open access.

Stephen Barr, m.d. of Sage Publications, said there has been an "unwillingness" from the EU to consider funded open access. He added: "Publishers generally believe that it [unfunded open access] will cause damage to the existing business model and may over time destroy the economic basis of many journals."

While publishers are wary, some open access campaigners believe the EU's recommendations do not go far enough. Prominent open access campaigner Peter Suber called the report "weak tea". He said: "It takes the problem seriously, as well as the opportunity and the previous studies and recommendations. But it stops far short of the near-consensus recommendation for an open access mandate for publicly-funded research."


Blogged with Flock

Monday, November 26, 2007

The Scientist : Academic publishers make open access deal

 The Scientist : Blogs

Academic publishers make open access deal

Posted by Alla Katsnelson

[Entry posted at 21st November 2007 09:30 PM GMT]

 

The fifth-largest academic journal publisher, SAGE, yesterday (November 20) announced an agreement with open access science and medicine publisher, Hindawi, to launch a new series of open access journals, the Chronicle of Higher Education reports.
Publication will be funded by author charges, using a gold open access model, the press release states. The UK-based SAGE will oversee the editorial side of the venture as well as marketing and promotion, while Hindawi will handle the technical aspects of the publication process.
According to its Web site, SAGE, which publishes more than 485 journals in the sciences, business and humanities, already allows authors -- for a $3000 fee -- to deposit full versions of their paper to "PubMed Central or its international equivalents" in order to comply with UK and US funding agency regulations.

The Scientist : Blogs

Scientist Solutions - Open-Access Poll - Please Vote#11578

Scientist Solutions - Open-Access Poll - Please Vote#11578

"Please Vote  -- or vote early and often -- it's the Chicago way" -- HSM

Open-Access Poll - Please Vote (10 Votes)

NIH funded research should have to be published in Open-Access
  30% - 3 votes

NIH researchers should be able to publish where ever they want
  0% - 0 votes

Tax-funded NIH research should be freely available to tax-payers
  40% - 4 votes

Its Inevitable! Open-Access publication is the way of the future
  30% - 3 votes

Scientific journal subscriptions will always have a place in science
  0% - 0 votes

Peer-reviewed process of subs journals is superior to open access
  0% - 0 votes

Scientist Solutions - Open-Access Poll - Please Vote#11578

Hardin Scholarly Communication News » U of Iowa Faculty Senate Approves Author's Addendum for Publishing Agreements - The University of Iowa Libraries

U of Iowa Faculty Senate Approves Author’s Addendum for Publishing Agreements

The University of Iowa Faculty Senate Approved the “Addendum to Publication Agreements for CIC Authors” at their October 23, 2007 meeting. This addendum is intended for authors to use to help them protect their intellectual property rights when publishing their work.

Excerpt from the “Statement on Publishing Agreements”:

Faculty authors should consider a number of factors when choosing and interacting with publishers for their works. The goal of publication should be to encourage widespread dissemination and impact; the means for accomplishing this will necessarily depend on the nature of the work in question, the author’s circumstances, available suitable outlets, and expectations in the author’s field of inquiry. In general, authors are encouraged to consider publishing strategies that will optimize short- and long-term access to their work, taking into account such factors as affordability, efficient means for distribution, a secure third-party archiving strategy, and flexible management of rights.

To read more of the statement and view the addendum, visit the full Statement and Addendum.

This entry was posted on Friday, November 16th, 2007 at 3:03 pm

Hardin Scholarly Communication News » Blog Archive » U of Iowa Faculty Senate Approves Author's Addendum for Publishing Agreements - The University of Iowa Libraries

Illinois Business Law Journal: Google's Book Search Library Project Faces Copyright Challenges

FYI -- Just a link.....

Google's Book Search Library Project Faces Copyright Challenges

Illinois Business Law Journal: Google's Book Search Library Project Faces Copyright Challenges

Pimps and Ferrets: Copyright and Culture in the United States, 1831-1891

"I hate the title -- but this might be of interest to someone who tracks the history of such issues -- wasn't it drilled into us that those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it --- or was that referring to the course? "

Pimps and Ferrets: Copyright and Culture in the United States, 1831-1891
Source: OhioLINK ETD (Dissertation, Eric Anderson, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Bowling Green State University, American Culture Studies/History, 2007)

How did people think about copyright in the nineteenth century? What did they think it was? What was it for? Was it property? Or something else? How did it function? Who could it benefit? Who might it harm? Pimps and Ferrets: Copyright and Culture in the United States, 1831-1891addresses questions like these, unpacking the ideas and popular ideologies connected to copyright in the United States during the nineteenth-century.

This era was rife with copyright-related controversy and excitement, including international squabbling, celebrity grandstanding, new technology, corporate exploitation, and ferocious arguments about piracy, reprinting, and the effects of copyright law. Then, as now, copyright was very important to a small group of people (authors and publishers), and slightly important to a much larger group (consumers and readers). However, as this dissertation demonstrates, these larger groups did have definite ideas about copyright, its function, and its purpose, in ways not obvious to the denizens of the legal and authorial realms.

This project draws on methods from both social and cultural history. Primary sources include a broad swath of magazine and newspaper articles, letters, and editorials about various copyright-related controversies. Examining these sources – both mainstream and obscure – illustrates the diversity of thinking about copyright issues during the nineteenth century, and suggests alternative frameworks for considering copyright in other times.

+ Full Paper (PDF; 1.8 MB)

Docuticker » Pimps and Ferrets: Copyright and Culture in the United States, 1831-1891

Copyright coalition polls presidential candidates

 Copyright coalition polls presidential candidates | Entertainment | Industry | Reuters

Shouldn't ALA and other educational groups  also be polling candidates to make sure that interests of the industry aren't the only ones represented when bringing this issue to the forefront?

 

By Brooks Boliek

WASHINGTON (Hollywood Reporter) - In an effort to get on the presidential radar screen, a copyright industry coalition is sending the candidates of both parties a questionnaire designed to illuminate their positions on issues surrounding intellectual property.

The five-question missive by the Copyright Alliance -- which includes the major studios, labels, and a couple of the guilds and artists' rights organizations -- is considered more of an educational document than a way to get campaign promises, said Copyright Alliance executive director Patrick Ross.

An industry that contributes $1.3 trillion to the U.S. economy and 11 million jobs needs to be paid attention to, Ross said.

"We're telling the candidates this is a significant constituency that you need to be aware of," Ross said.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

Copyright coalition polls presidential candidates | Entertainment | Industry | Reuters

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

The MTTLR Blog: Copyright Reform Part 2

The MTTLR Blog: Copyright Reform Part 2 

Copyright Reform Part 2

by: Professor Jessica Litman
Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School

In part 1, I explained some of the appeal of seeking to begin a copyright reform process by agreeing on a set of copyright principles to guide lawmakers in their drafting. In the intensely polarized environment that has come to characterize the copyright bar, confining a group’s attention to copyright principles may be one way to begin a productive conversation.
Last spring, Boalt Professor Pamela Samuelson recruited a group of copyright experts with diverse views to come together and discuss copyright reform, with the ultimate goal of producing such a set of copyright principles. I’m a member of that group. One of our first homework assignments was to write and circulate individual drafts of appropriate copyright principles. In this initial stage, the goal was not for each of us to come up with a comprehensive Restatement of wise copyright law. Rather, we agreed that each of us would write down one or more principles that we believed should be reflected in the group’s final work product.
The draft that I sent to the other members of the group follows. The draft does not represent what I would write if I could use a magic wand to replace the words in title 17 with words of my choosing. It is, instead, an attempt to articulate principles on which copyright experts across the copyright political spectrum might be able to agree. I agreed to post the draft here, because I’m interested in your comments.
Preliminary draft of copyright principles
The copyright law grants exclusive rights that are bounded in time, subject matter and scope. Some ambiguity in the location of those boundaries is probably inevitable, since technological progress introduces new possibilities, and the prospect of lobbying to expand or contract extant rights is always on the horizon. To the extent possible, boundaries should be clear, since ambiguities can deter investment in and exploitation and enjoyment of copyrighted works.
A functioning copyright system requires that there be easy ways for people who want to make lawful licensed uses of works to find out to whom they need to apply for permission. The U.S. law used to rely on indivisibility, notice, registration, and recordation to perform those functions. It has also introduced a variety of compulsory licenses to obviate the need to seek permission to use some works in some markets. Other jurisdictions rely on limited alienability or/and a multiplicity of collecting societies to perform these functions. The copyright system needs some mechanism or mechanisms to do this job.
Exclusive rights that are ambiguous in scope exacerbate the problems posed by rights holders who are difficult to identify, and vice versa.
The exclusive rights granted by copyright law should encourage creation and dissemination of works by ensuring that copyright owners have meaningful opportunities to control the direct commercial exploitation of their works. Copyright owners should not necessarily be entitled to control all incidents of direct exploitation of their works. Resale of books and paintings, for example, is direct commercial exploitation of copyrighted works that has traditionally been sheltered from copyright owner control by the first sale doctrine.
The exclusive rights granted by copyright law should encourage reading, viewing, watching, listening to and learning from copyrighted works by preserving individuals’ freedom to read, view, watch, listen to and otherwise enjoy copyrighted works as they want to without being subject to pervasive copyright owner control of reading, viewing, etc. Reading freely, however, is not necessarily the same thing as reading for free.
The exclusive rights granted by copyright should encourage investment in new markets and modes of enjoying copyrighted works by excluding most indirect exploitation of copyrighted works from copyright-owner control. The makers and sellers of trumpets have built their business model on the foundation of band music that was written and is controlled by someone else. The availability of trumpets has increased the market for and popularity of band music, to the benefit of composers, trumpet players, and trumpet music fans. Insofar as possible, the copyright law should neither give the owners of band music copyrights the right to control the design, manufacture or sale of trumpets, nor give the makers and sellers of trumpets the right to control the sale or performance of band music.
The public invests in the copyright system both by granting rights to copyright owners through the enactment of copyright laws, and by complying with the laws its Congress enacts. If the public perceives copyright law to give it a poor return on its investment, it may well respond by divesting – either pressing its elected representatives to enact additional limitations and privileges or simply failing to comply with rules it no longer perceives as legitimate. Enforcing copyright law in an atmosphere of public cynicism about the legitimacy of the law is a difficult task. A public that complies with copyright only because it’s afraid of the copyright police will soon find ways to evade or restrain the copyright police. (Recent efforts to enforce copyrights against individual consumers alleged to have infringed copyrights over peer-to-peer file sharing networks, for example, have garnered significant press coverage. Insofar as people are able to make accurate measurements, these efforts do not seem to have reduced the volume of unauthorized peer-to-peer file sharing, nor to have significantly increased public respect for copyright law.) The long-term health of the copyright system, thus, requires that members of the public believe that their investment in copyright is well spent.
One key feature of copyright laws that have public confidence is a balance between the copyright owners’ exclusive rights to control the exploitation of their works and the public’s freedom to enjoy those works. (In general, countries other than the U.S. that phrase their exclusive rights in broader terms than the United States does have needed more numerous explicit exceptions for members of the general public.) The public appears to believe that copyright exclusive rights are already very broad, and decades of public relations efforts don’t seem to have persuaded people that copyright gives creators and disseminators too little. If copyright is to retain or regain its legitimacy, any broadening of exclusive rights probably needs to be balanced by an increase in personal freedom to enjoy copyrighted works.

The MTTLR Blog: Copyright Reform Part 2

Just An Online Minute » Blog Archive » Just An Online Minute… Coming: Brave New World Of Copyright Chasing?

 

Just An Online Minute… Coming: Brave New World Of Copyright Chasing?

Posted November 20th, 2007 by Wendy Davis

Many observers have said that copyright laws are out of touch with everyday experience. Now, University of Utah professor John Tehranian has laid out the case for that proposition in his law review article, “Infringement Nation: Copyright Reform and the Norm/Law Gap.”

In the paper, he takes readers through a hypothetical day in the life of a law professor to show how he regularly violates at least the letter of the copyright law — with each violation carrying a potential penalty of $150,000 in damages.

The total: Up to $12.45 million in fines for 83 infringements — ranging from singing “Happy Birthday” to a friend (publicly performing a copyrighted musical composition) to going swimming without a t-shirt, and thereby revealing a shoulder tattoo of the Hanna-Barbera character Captain Caveman (unauthorized reproduction of a copyrighted work and unauthorized display of an animated character).

Of course, copyright laws aren’t new — and neither is singing “Happy Birthday” in public. But Tehranian argues that the difference now is that e-mail, camera phones, and other digital technology that we increasingly rely on create a record of infringement that can be used in court.

“The very technologies that enhance our media experiences are rapidly bringing us closer to the Panopticon state in which a near-total enforcement of intellectual property rights becomes viable,” he writes.

Consider singing along with the stereo in the car — a copyright infringement, though one that’s never been enforced. He proposes a future scenario where cars come with voice recognition software that monitors the car for singing and then bills the owner licensing fees for having hummed along: “One can readily imagine a future dystopian world where the record labels, long since irrelevant to the development and distribution of new music, become nothing more than copyright trolls, drawing their revenue entirely from collections (or litigation) of this kind,” he writes.

The article’s especially timely given that the record industry shows no signs of backing away from its strategy of pursuing litigation against file-sharers, even as the biggest musicians are breaking away from their labels. In the last few months, while the record industry won a $220,000 judgment against single mother Jammie Thomas, Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor (in collaboration with Saul Williams) were busy releasing albums for free online.

Given recent events, Tehranian’s prediction that the record labels will be left with little other than trolling for piracy doesn’t seem all that far-fetched.

Just An Online Minute » Blog Archive » Just An Online Minute… Coming: Brave New World Of Copyright Chasing?

RIAA, MPAA urge pro-copyright vows from presidential candidates | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

RIAA, MPAA urge pro-copyright vows from presidential candidates | Tech news blog - CNET News.com 

RIAA, MPAA urge pro-copyright vows from presidential candidates

Posted by Anne Broache

A coalition of entertainment and publishing industry heavyweights would like to see the 2008 presidential candidates champion "meaningful copyright protection" in their policy platforms.

The requests came Tuesday in the form of a letter (PDF) and a questionnaire (PDF), dispatched by the Washington-based Copyright Alliance to 17 candidates vying for Democratic or Republican nominations next year. The group has requested responses to its questionnaire by early January of next year and plans to make the answers public.

The alliance's 44 members include the Recording Industry Association of America, Motion Picture Association of America, Association of American Publishers, Entertainment Software Association, Business Software Alliance, as well as companies like CBS, NBC, News Corp., Microsoft, Viacom, and Walt Disney. The same group, which formed earlier this year, staged a Capitol Hill expo last month aimed at educating staffers and politicos on its stance.

Each of the five questions rests on the premise that copyright protection is vital to the U.S. economy, and they're clearly worded with an eye toward eliciting a certain response. (As one reporter on a conference call about the announcement remarked, the approach seems a bit like asking the candidates whether they like Mom and apple pie.)

One question, for instance, asks: "How would you promote the progress of science and creativity, as enumerated in the U.S. Constitution, by upholding and strengthening copyright law and preventing its diminishment?"

Others ask how candidates would "protect the incentive to create by committing sufficient resources to support effective civil and criminal enforcement of copyright laws domestically and internationally" and "ensure inclusion of copyright protections in bilateral, regional and multilateral trade agreements to protect creators and foster global development."

"The future of our creative output in the United States is at stake in the 2008 presidential election," wrote Patrick Ross, the group's executive director. "It is critical not only for members of the creative community but also for the U.S. economy to ensure that copyrights are respected and piracy is reduced. We are asking you to let us know what you would do to help preserve one of America's greatest strengths, its creative community."

In a conference call with reporters Tuesday afternoon, Ross said the group also intends to hold briefings with presidential campaigns about its copyright priorities, but it's not "in the endorsement game," although individual alliance members may choose to take that step.

The heads of the RIAA and MPAA both heralded the importance of the contenders' intellectual property views in posts at the Copyright Alliance's Web site on Tuesday.

"While national security and health care have dominated this season's campaign dialog, a key issue for the 2008 presidential candidates includes their commitment to recognizing the critical importance of intellectual property rights," wrote MPAA chief Dan Glickman.

RIAA chief Mitch Bainwol put it this way: "When Americans vote, they are making decisions about the values important to them. And one of those values must be a commitment to creativity. For some, that commitment will be a function of the economic significance of intellectual property. For others, that commitment will be about the power of the ideas our content spreads throughout the world. But the commitment to intellectual property rights, whatever the motivation, is what we must look for."

RIAA, MPAA urge pro-copyright vows from presidential candidates | Tech news blog - CNET News.com

Universal Music Group Nixes Nine Inch Nails Remix Site | Listening Post from Wired.com

Universal Music Group Nixes Nine Inch Nails Remix Site | Listening Post from Wired.com 

Universal Music Group Nixes Nine Inch Nails Remix Site

By Eliot Van Buskirk EmailNovember 20, 2007 | 1:47:40 PM

Greed A few years ago, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails persuaded his label, Universal Music Group, to let him post master recordings on his website for fans to remix.  People do this anyway with other artists, using mixed-down versions of the songs, but Reznor gave his fans the files making up the tracks individually, which allows them to do true remixes rather than manipulating the released version of a song.

"A lot of really fun stuff started to happen….communities developed, web sites were created, even traditional radio got in the game and began playing the fans' mixes," according to Reznor.  An album of fan remixes was released, and then Reznor decided to post the fan remixes.

But on Saturday, his former label, Universal, which owns the master rights to those songs, alerted Reznor that because it's trying to sue YouTube and MySpace, the remixes had to come down.  The label is suing YouTube (Google) and MySpace (News Corp.), because they want to be alerted by copyright owners when a user posts something copyrighted, rather than being required to screen every song and video before it appears.

Reznor wrote, "Universal feels that if they host our remix site, they will be opening themselves up to the accusation that they are sponsoring the same technical violation of copyright they are suing these companies for... we are challenged at the last second to find a way of bringing this idea to life without getting splashed by the urine as these media companies piss all over each other's feet.  We have a cool and innovative site ready to launch but we're currently scratching our heads as to how to proceed."
Here's his full explanation:

Several years ago I persuaded my record company to let me begin posting my master recording files on nin.com, in order to see what kind of user-generated content would materialize from my music. I had no agenda… the main reason I did it was because I thought it was cool and something I would have liked to do if it was available to me. A lot of really fun stuff started to happen….communities developed, web sites were created, even traditional radio got in the game and began playing the fans' mixes. I felt the experiment, despite not having a specific purpose, was a success. So much so that we're now releasing a remix album that includes some of this fan-created material as well as the actual multitrack master files for every song from my latest record, Year Zero.

One piece was missing to me and that was an official nin.com presence for aggregating all of the fan-created remixes. Several intrepid fans had stepped up and done a great job providing a destination for people to post these, but I felt all along this was a function I should more directly support. So, upon release of this new remix album, our plan has been to launch an official site on nin.com that would provide a place for all fan remix material and other interactive fan experiences.

Or so I thought.

On Saturday morning I became aware of a legal hitch in our plans. My former record company and current owner of all these master files, Universal, is currently involved in a lawsuit with other media titans Google (YouTube) and News Corp (MySpace). Universal is contending that these sites do not have what is referred to as "safe harbor" under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and therefore are in copyright violation because users have uploaded music and video content that is owned by Universal. Universal feels that if they host our remix site, they will be opening themselves up to the accusation that they are sponsoring the same technical violation of copyright they are suing these companies for. Their premise is that if any fan decides to remix one of my masters with material Universal doesn't own - a "mash-up", a sample, whatever - and upload it to the site, there is no safe harbor under the DMCA (according to Universal) and they will be doing exactly what MySpace and YouTube are doing. This behavior may get hauled out in court and impact their lawsuit. Because of this they no longer will host our remix site, and are insisting that Nine Inch Nails host it. In exchange for this they will continue to let me upload my Universal masters and make them available to fans, BUT shift the liability of hosting them to me. Part of the arrangement is having user licenses that the fans sign (not unlike those on MySpace or You Tube) saying they will not use unauthorized materials. If they WERE to do such a thing, everybody sues everybody and the world abruptly ends.

While I am profoundly perturbed with this stance as content owners continue to stifle all innovation in the face of the digital revolution, it is consistent with what they have done in the past. So... we are challenged at the last second to find a way of bringing this idea to life without getting splashed by the urine as these media companies piss all over each other’s feet. We have a cool and innovative site ready to launch but we're currently scratching our heads as to how to proceed.
More to come….

By the way, the potential implications of a lawsuit like this one go well beyond creating hurdles for a Nine Inch Nails remix site. Here is an excerpt from technology site Ars Technica regarding a similar lawsuit Viacom has filed against YouTube:

The DMCA's Safe Harbor provisions aren't just important to video sharing sites; they're important to almost every sector of Internet-based business.
"Nearly every major Internet company depends on the very same legal foundation that YouTube is built on," said von Lohmann. "A legal defeat for YouTube could result in fundamental changes to its business, potentially even making it commercially impossible to embrace user-generated content without first 'clearing' every video. In other words, a decisive victory for Viacom could potentially turn the Internet into TV, a place where nothing gets on the air until a cadre of lawyers signs off," he said. "More importantly, a victory for Viacom could potentially have enormous implications for Yahoo, eBay, Amazon, MySpace, and many other Internet companies, because they all rely on the same DMCA Safe Harbors to protect many facets of their businesses, as well. The stakes are high all around."

Indeed.

Universal Music Group Nixes Nine Inch Nails Remix Site | Listening Post from Wired.com

Major EU Funded Nanotube Research Group, DESYGN-IT, Publish in AZoJono - The Open Access Online Nanotech Journal

Major EU Funded Nanotube Research Group, DESYGN-IT, Publish in AZoJono - The Open Access Online Nanotech Journal 

Major EU Funded Nanotube Research Group, DESYGN-IT, Publish in AZoJono - The Open Access Online Nanotech Journal

    SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 20 /PRNewswire/ -- Open access online journal,
AZoJono* (The AZo Journal of Nanotechnology Online) has released a special
nanotubes research edition in conjunction with DESYGN-IT*, an EU funded
collaborative research project that has been investigating the design,
synthesis, growth and application of nanotubes, nanowires and nanotube
arrays for industrial applications.



URL for special edition
[http://www.azonano.com/nanotechnology%20journal.asp]
DESYGN-IT, is a collaborative research project between a number of
Universities and SME partners from several of the member states of the EU.

The AZoJono special edition comprises seven research articles that
focus on cutting edge carbon nanotube research, in particular the
characterisation of nanotubes and their products. Applications areas
discussed include the lithographic stamping of computer chips, connector
wires for computer chips, flat screen displays, catalysts, electrodes,
nanowires, miniature actuators and reinforced composite materials.

Professor Werner Blau from Trinity College Dublin, a leader in carbon
nanotube research and the DESYGN-IT project co-ordinator stated, "We are
very pleased to be able to release these papers online through the open
access journal, AZoJono. For some time now, I've been well aware of how
effective AZoJono is at distributing the latest Nanotech research findings
to a large global audience."

AZoNano.com Chief Editor David Freund commented, "It is very pleasing
to see the recognition that AZoJono is now receiving from leading Nanotech
researchers such as the DESYGN-IT team. Some of our most popular Nanotech
papers have now received over 40,000 page views and an involvement with
groups such as DESYGN-IT confirms that AZoJono's open access approach using
our patented OARS (Open Access Author Rewards) system is starting to gain
some significant traction as a highly successful mechanism for researchers
to broadcast their findings to the global Nanotech community."

About DESYGN-IT

Members of DESYGN-IT include Trinity College Dublin, National
University of Ireland Cork, Jozef Stefan Institute, University of Ulster,
Queen Mary and Westfield College, Queen University Belfast,
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, University of Cambridge, Toughglass, Sensor
Technology & Devices, Mid Sweden University, Ntera, Mo6 and University of
Latvia.

About AZoJono

AZoJono - The AZo Journal of Nanotechnology Online
[http://www.azonano.com/nanotechnology.asp] is published online at
AZoNano.com - The A to Z of Nanotechnology - a site operated by AZoNetwork,
Sydney Australia [http://www.azonetwork.com]. AZoJono publishes high
quality articles and papers on all aspects of nanotechnology.



CONTACT:
Dr. Ian Birkby
AZoNetwork
Tel: +61-2-9999-0070
Fax: +61-2-9999-0071
e-mail: ianbirkby@azonetwork.com


SOURCE AZoNetwork




Major EU Funded Nanotube Research Group, DESYGN-IT, Publish in AZoJono - The Open Access Online Nanotech Journal

Demands diluted for open access health research - SciDev.Net

Demands diluted for open access health research - SciDev.Net 

Demands diluted for open access health research

 

Supporters of open access believe it is the only way to get information to all those who need it.

Katherine Nightingale
19 November 2007
Source: SciDev.Net

Revised guidelines by an international committee could threaten efforts to persuade the WHO to freely disseminate findings from government-funded health research projects.

Supporters of an 'open access' policy had a clause inserted to that effect in an earlier version of the committee's guidelines.

But the most recent draft, which will be submitted to the World Health Assembly next year, states that open access should merely be "strongly encouraged".

The WHO Intergovernmental Working Group on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property, comprising member states of the WHO, suspended discussions at their second session last week (10 November) in Geneva, Switzerland.

The group aims to prepare a global strategy on essential health-research issues that disproportionately affect developing countries.

There was no mention of open access in their original draft, released in July. Statements on open access as a requirement were inserted later, in the 'Rio text' — a sub-regional consensus document from 14 Latin American countries — at a meeting on 3–5 September.

Open access publishing makes electronic forms of scientific papers freely available on the web. Its advocates say this is the only way to get information to all who need it.

But critics argue that publishers will lose vital revenue and that compensation measures, such as payment frompublishing authors for the option, could hinder release of information by authors in developing countries.

Supporters of open access claim the wording change dashes an opportunity for the WHO to promote it in the developing world.

"Strong encouragement does not work: we already know this from the failure of other non-mandatory policies, whether by researchers' funders or researchers' employing institutions," Stephen Harnad, professor of Cognitive Science, Electronics and Computer Science at the UK-based University of Southampton, told SciDev.Net.

"The only thing that works is a mandate. The WHO could have helped accelerate open access momentum, but if it does not upgrade again to a mandate recommendation, it will either not help, or it may even reduce momentum," he adds.

"The WHO have immense opportunities to benefit health in the poorest nations and if they put their considerable influence and resources into open access, things would progress far faster," says Barbara Kirsop of the Electronic Publishing Trust for Development.

"It is only too clear that if there is just a 'request' to deposit research publications in open access institutional repositories, it won't work as scientists are just interested in the next bit of research and forget all about ways to increase the impact of their work," she adds.

"Fortunately, because establishing open access institutional repositories, for example, is so low-cost, things are moving ahead anyway, particularly in Latin America."

Demands diluted for open access health research - SciDev.Net

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement 

SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

- 20 Nov 2007

By SAGE Publications

Page 1 of 2

November 20, 2007 – SAGE and the Hindawi Publishing Corporation have today entered into an agreement to jointly launch and publish a suite of fully Open Access (OA) journals.

This is a bold strategic partnership that places SAGE as the largest academic publisher to develop a collection of Gold Open Access journals, marking the company’s continued investment in widening access to important scholarly research. SAGE is the world’s fifth largest journal publisher, with over 485 journals in the humanities, social sciences, science, technology, and medicine.

The initiative further strengthens Hindawi’s leadership in developing a strong portfolio of Open Access journals. Hindawi currently publishes more than 100 Open Access journals covering a wide range of subjects in science, technology, and medicine.

The partnership will see equal ownership between the two organizations. SAGE will have sole responsibility for the editorial development, marketing, and promotion of the new journals while Hindawi will provide the technology and expertise needed to run the publication process from the point of submission, through the peer-review process, to the point of final publication. Under the model, all SAGE-Hindawi journal articles will be made freely available online via the Hindawi platform, funded by author charges.

“SAGE is committed to maintaining innovative publishing models for the benefit of the academic community, in keeping with our vision to be the natural home for authors, editors and societies,” commented Blaise Simqu, CEO, SAGE. He continued, “SAGE is in a unique position as a growing STM publisher, allowing us to explore and actively experiment without posing a threat to our existing business models.

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

“Our position as a leading independent publisher enables us to respond to the changing needs of our authors, editors and societies, helping them to reach broader communities, and maximize the impact of their work. Hindawi is an ideal partner for SAGE, being able to offer a highly effective publishing system that will allow us to focus on our longstanding reputation for high quality marketing and editorial expertise, while offering a viable option for disseminating open, unrestricted access to research.”

“We are delighted to be working with SAGE on this joint initiative,” said Ahmed Hindawi, CEO of Hindawi Publishing Corporation. “Hindawi currently has a very successful Open Access journal collection, which is quite solid both academically and financially, and SAGE’s strong market presence and expertise will enable us to further expand our Open Access offerings to the scientific communities we serve.”

###

SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets. Since 1965, SAGE has helped inform and educate a global community of scholars, practitioners, researchers, and students spanning a wide range of subject areas including business, humanities, social sciences, and science, technology and medicine. An independent company, SAGE has principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore. For more information, please visit: www.sagepub.com

Hindawi Publishing Corporation is a rapidly growing open access publisher, with offices in Cairo, Egypt. Hindawi currently publishes more than 100 fully Open Access journals covering a wide range of subjects in Science, Technology, and Medicine. The company’s web site is located at www.hindawi.com.

The SAGE-Hindawi platform will be launched at Online Information 2007, December 4-6 in London. More information on the SAGE-Hindawi initiative is available at www.sage-hindawi.com, along with a sign-up for the latest news about the initiative.

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement 

SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

- 20 Nov 2007

By SAGE Publications

Page 1 of 2

November 20, 2007 – SAGE and the Hindawi Publishing Corporation have today entered into an agreement to jointly launch and publish a suite of fully Open Access (OA) journals.

This is a bold strategic partnership that places SAGE as the largest academic publisher to develop a collection of Gold Open Access journals, marking the company’s continued investment in widening access to important scholarly research. SAGE is the world’s fifth largest journal publisher, with over 485 journals in the humanities, social sciences, science, technology, and medicine.

The initiative further strengthens Hindawi’s leadership in developing a strong portfolio of Open Access journals. Hindawi currently publishes more than 100 Open Access journals covering a wide range of subjects in science, technology, and medicine.

The partnership will see equal ownership between the two organizations. SAGE will have sole responsibility for the editorial development, marketing, and promotion of the new journals while Hindawi will provide the technology and expertise needed to run the publication process from the point of submission, through the peer-review process, to the point of final publication. Under the model, all SAGE-Hindawi journal articles will be made freely available online via the Hindawi platform, funded by author charges.

“SAGE is committed to maintaining innovative publishing models for the benefit of the academic community, in keeping with our vision to be the natural home for authors, editors and societies,” commented Blaise Simqu, CEO, SAGE. He continued, “SAGE is in a unique position as a growing STM publisher, allowing us to explore and actively experiment without posing a threat to our existing business models.

FirstScience - SAGE and Hindawi announce landmark open access agreement

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Linux.com :: Open Access bill vetoed

Linux.com :: Open Access bill vetoed 

Open Access bill vetoed

By Bruce Byfield on November 16, 2007 (3:00:00 PM)


Supporters of the open access movement (OA), the open-source-inspired community that promotes free access to academic research, are disappointed but not discouraged by the defeat of a bill that would have required research published by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the United States to be available to the public. Instead, they see the bill as an important step in raising awareness about OA among American legislators and the general public. Nor do they rule out the eventual passage of the OA provisions.

The bill in question is the Labor, Health, and Human Services (LHHS) Appropriations Act, 2008, or HR 3043, which set a budget of $606 billion for spending in these areas. Among the dozens of provisions in the bill was the statement that:

The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine's PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

The bill was vetoed by President George W. Bush on November 13. The reason for the veto was not the OA provision, which was not mentioned in his explanation of the move, but rather the proposed funding for what Bush described as "wasteful projects" such as a prison museum, a sailing school, and a program for teaching Portuguese as a second language. Funding for stem cell research, which was expected to be a reason for the veto, had already been removed from the bill.

In contrast to Bush's statement, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described LHHS as "a bipartisan and fiscally responsible bill."

The veto was widely seen by both the mainstream media and OA supporters such as blogger Peter Suber and Matt Cockerill of Biomed Central, the world's largest OA publisher, as part of Bush's ongoing budget struggle with the Democratic majority in the Congress and the Senate. As Cockerill puts it, considering the recent power struggles between the White House and Congress, everyone was "very much forewarned" of the veto.

The bill returned to Congress on November 16 for a vote to overturn the presidential veto. The vote did succeed, and a revised appropriations bill is now in the works. Whether that revised bill will include the OA provision is still uncertain.

Implications

Obviously, the policy of NIH, one of the largest funders of research in the world, has a wide influence, and passage of the bill would probably have encouraged OA support elsewhere in the world. However, disappointment over the bill's failure is muted by the fact that the provision for OA in HR 3043 was relatively mild, as Suber points out.

Similarly, Cockerill notes that policies in such countries as the United Kingdom and Germany are in many cases already in advance of the proposed NIH policy. "This is just one facet of the overall trend to OA," he says.

Both Suber and Cockerill saw reason for optimism. Suber points out that despite intensive lobbying by publishers' groups such as PRISM, a proposed amendment by the White House that would have limited the OA language to ensure that the NIH policy did not undermine peer review or copyright did not survive.

Similarly, two amendments by Senator James Inhofe (R-OK), one to delete the OA provision and the other to dilute the language, were also defeated. Both amendments, Suber suggests, may have been inspired by Reed Elsevier, one of the largest academic publishers in the United States and one of Inhote's top financial supporters.

"It's very clear, and a matter of public record, that a good deal of money is spent by the publishers on lobbying about issues like this," Cockerill says. "But clearly in this case that wasn't enough to block the move toward increasing OA in research. The strength of feeling in government and among the research community has been able to overcome that strong lobby.

Just as importantly, Cockerill suggests that the three-year history of the effort to pass the NIH initiative into law has resulted in increasing awareness of OA among researchers, academic administrators, and elected officials. "The high profile of this bill has certainly kept OA in people's attention." he says. "A lot of the support for OA has been coming, not just from those directly involved in the research community, but also those who have an interest in medical research -- patients, disease-interest groups, taxpayers, and people who have an interest from a lay person's point of view. I think it has been very good in continuing to further awareness of OA."

Cockerill says that the rise of the Internet has increased the demand for accessibility in general. People, he says, are asking, "Who benefits from freezing access to data? Is it the public, or is it only special interest groups who want to maintain the status quo? That question is arising in many situations."

As one proof of the increased awareness, Cockerill cites a recent student forum he attended at Harvard Medical School. Several years ago, he suggests, such a forum would probably have debated the merits of OA. Now, the debate is over the most practical steps needed to implement it. Increasingly, the basic desirability of OA is being taken for granted.

At any rate, as Suber predicted before these events in the SPARC Open Access Newsletter, the OA provision stands a strong chance of being revived. Suber notes that a modified version of LHHS is required to fund the related government departments in 2008, and that the NIH proposal has a good chance of being included in the revised appropriations bill.

"OA has always had strong bipartisan support, and we depended on Republicans as well as Democrats this year for the strong votes in each house," Suber writes. "We particularly depended on Republican support to help prevent the publishing lobby from inserting a stronger objection to the NIH policy." In the long run, then, perhaps not only the war but this particular battle may still be won.

Bruce Byfield is a computer journalist who writes regularly for Linux.com and IT Manager's Journal.

Linux.com :: Open Access bill vetoed

OA As "Research Spam": II - Open Access Archivangelism

 

OA As "Research Spam": II

On Thu, 15 Nov 2007, Joseph Esposito wrote:

"Hey, Stevan, come off it. Read the article. Once again you pick a fight when I mostly agree with you."
I was commenting on your interview rather than your article, but if you insist, here goes. The comments are much the same. I think we are galaxies apart, Joe, because you keep on imagining that OA is about unrefereed peer-to-peer content, whereas it is about making all peer-reviewed journal articles freely accessible online:
Comments on: Esposito, J. (2007) Open Access 2.0: The nautilus: where - and how - OA will actually work. The Scientist 21(11) 52.
open access does not appear to increase dissemination significantly... [because] Most researchers are affiliated with institutions, whether academic, governmental, or corporate, that have access to most of the distinguished literature in the field.
Strongly disagree. You think there is little or no access problem; user surveys and library budget statistics suggest otherwise.
Thus, though there may be some exceptional situations, especially in the short term, the increased dissemination brought about by open access takes place largely at the margins of the research community.
Strongly disagree. On the contrary, it is the top 10-20% of articles -- the ones most users use and cite -- that benefit most from being made OA. (They receive 80-90% of the citations.)
Another important reason open access does not significantly increase dissemination is that attention, not scholarly content, is the scarce commodity. You can build it, but they may not come.
Strongly disagree. To repeat, OA is about published journal articles; so making them free online merely adds to whatever access they enjoy already.
It is one thing to write an article and upload it to a Web server somewhere, where it will be indexed by Google and its ilk. It is fully another thing for someone to find that article out of the growing millions on the Internet by happening upon just the right combination of keywords to type into a search bar.
Strongly disagree, and this is the heart of the equivocation. You are speaking here about self-publishing of unrefereed, unpublished papers, whereas OA is about making published, peer-reviewed articles OA -- whether by publishing them in an OA journal or by self-archiving them in an OA Institutional Repository (IR).
The very same indices and search engines that find the published articles will find the OA ones too, because making them OA is just an add-on to publishing them in the first place. It is only because you keep seeing the OA papers as not being peer-reviewed and published, Joe, that you give yourself and others the impression that there is an either/or here -- when in reality OA is about both/and.
Would you rather double the amount of published information available to you, or increase the amount of time you have to review information you can already access by one hour a day? We are awash in information, but short on time to evaluate it. Open access only worsens this by opening the floodgates to more and more unfiltered information.
This is a false opposition: OA is about accessing all journal articles, not just the minority that your institution can afford. If there are too many articles and too little time, affordability is surely not the way to cope with it! Let it all be OA and then decide how much of it you can afford the time to read. The candidates are all available via exactly the same indexes and search engines. The only difference is that without OA, many are inaccessible, whereas with OA they all are.
open access is most meaningful within a small community whose members know each other and formally and informally exchange the terms of discourse.
You are again thinking of direct, peer-to-peer exchange of unrefereed content, whereas OA is about peer-reviewed, published journal articles, irrespective of community size. (The usership of most published research journal articles is very small.)
Many of the trappings of formal publishing are of little interest to many tight-knit communities of researchers. Who needs peer review, copy editing, or sales and marketing?
I agree about not needing the sales and marketing, and perhaps the copy editing too; but since OA is about peer-reviewed journal articles, the answer to that is: all users need it.
what of the work for which there is little or no audience? What if there is simply no market? This is the ideal province of open access publishing: providing services to authors whose work is so highly specialized as to make it impossible to command the attention of a wide readership.
Most journal articles have little or no audience. This is a spurious opposition. And we are talking about OA, not necessarily OA publishing.
the innermost spiral of the shell of a nautilus, where a particular researcher wishes to communicate with a handful of intimates and researchers working in precisely the same area. Many of the trappings of formal publishing are of little interest to this group. Peer review? But these are the peers; they can make their own judgments.
The peers are quite capable of making the distinction between one another's unrefereed preprints and their peer-reviewed journal articles; and the difference is essential, regardless of the size of the field. OA is not about dispensing with peer review. It is about maximizing access to its outcome.
the next spiral is for people in the field but not working exactly on the topic of interest to the author; one more spiral and we have the broader discipline (e.g., biochemistry); beyond that are adjacent disciplines (e.g., organic chemistry); until we move to scientists in general, other highly educated individuals, university administrators, government policy-makers, investors, and ultimately to the outer spirals, where we have consumer media, whose task is to inform the general public.
I can't follow all of this: It seems to me all these "spirals" need peer-reviewed content. There is definitely a continuum from unrefereed preprints to peer-reviewed postprints -- I've called that the "Scholarly Skywriting" continuum -- but peer-review continues to be an essential function in ensuring the quality of the outcome, and certifying it as worth the time to read and the effort of trying to build upon or apply.
Harnad, S. (1990) Scholarly Skywriting and the Prepublication Continuum of Scientific Inquiry. Psychological Science 1: 342 - 343 (reprinted in Current Contents 45: 9-13, November 11 1991).
not all brands are created equal.
That's what journal names, peer-review standards and track records are for
Whatever the virtues of traditional publishing, authors may choose to work in an open-access environment for any number of reasons. For one, they simply may want to share information with fellow researchers, and posting an article on the Internet is a relatively easy way to do that
Again the false opposition: It is not "traditional publishing" vs. an unrefereed free-for-all. OA is about making traditionally peer-reviewed and published articles free for all online.
(I think some of the funding agencies have been misinformed about the benefits of open access, and they certainly have been misinformed about the costs, especially over the long term, but it certainly is within the prerogatives of a funding agency to stipulate open-access publishing.)
The funding agencies are mandating OA, not OA publishing. They have been correctly informed about the benefits of OA (it maximizes research access, usage and impact); the costs of IRs and Green OA self-archiving are negligible and the costs of Gold OA publishing are irrelevant (since OA publishing is not what is being mandated).
Whether in the long term mandated Green OA will lead to a transition to Gold OA is a matter of speculation: No one knows whether or when. But if and when it does, the institutional money currently paying for non-OA subscriptions will be more than enough to pay for Gold OA publishing (which will amount to peer review alone) several times over.
open access would be useful for: an article that may have been rejected by one or more publishers, but the author still wants to get the material "out there";
No, OA is not for "research spam" (as you called it, more candidly, in your Interview): OA is for all peer-reviewed research; all 2.5 million articles published in all 25,000 peer-reviewed research journals, in all disciplines, countries and languages, at all levels of the journal quality hierarchy.
an author who may be frustrated by the process and scheduling of traditional publishers;
Authors can certainly self-archive their preprints early if they wish,
but OA begins with the refereed postprint (and that can be self-archived on the day the final draft is accepted).
an author who may have philosophical reservations about working with large organizations, especially those in the for-profit sector, not to mention deep and growing suspicions about the whole concept of intellectual property.
I am not sure what all that means, but it's certainly not researchers' primary motivation for providing OA, nor its primary benefit.
A reason to publish in an open-access format need not be very strong, as the barriers to such publication are indeed low. It takes little: an Internet connection, a Web server somewhere, and an address for others to find the material.
Again, the equivocation: There is no "OA format." The target content is published, peer-reviewed journal articles, and OA means making them accessible free for all online. Peer-to-peer exchange of unrefereed papers is useful, but that is not what OA is about, or for.
Over time the list of invited readers may grow, and some names may be dropped from the list. The author, in other words, controls access to the document. This access can be extended to an academic department or to the members of a professional society; access can be granted to any authenticated directory of users.
This is all just about the exchange of unrefereed content. It is not about OA.
At some point the author may remove all access restrictions, making the document fully open access.
Making unrefereed content freely accessible online is useful, but it is not what OA is about.
It is a matter of debate as to whether any of these steps, including the final one, constitutes "publication," but it is indisputable that access can be augmented and that the marginal cost of doing so approaches zero
. Providing free online access to unrefereed, unpublished content is not what OA is about, or for.
The fundamental tension in scholarly communications today is between the innermost spiral of the nautilus, where peers, narrowly defined, communicate directly with peers, and the outer spirals, which have been historically well-served by traditional means. Open-access advocates sit at the center and attempt to take their model beyond the peers.
There is no tension at all. Unrefereed preprints, circulated for peer feedback, are and have always been an earlier embryological stage of the publication continuum, with peer-review and publication the later stage. OA does not sit at the center. It is very explicitly focused on the published postprint, though self-archiving the preprint is always welcome too.
Now, Joe, can we agree that we do indeed disagree?
Stevan Harnad
American Scientist Open Access Forum

OA As "Research Spam": II - Open Access Archivangelism

Publishing Management Consultant: "Open Access Is Research Spam" - Open Access Archivangelism

 

Publishing Management Consultant: "Open Access Is Research Spam"

 


SUMMARY: Joseph Esposito, a management consultant, says Open Access (OA) is "research spam." But OA's explicit target content is all 2.5 million peer-reviewed articles published annually in the world's 25,000 peer-reviewed research journals. (So either all research is spam or OA is not spam after all!).
   Esposito says researchers' problem isn't access to journal articles (they already have that): rather, it's not having the time to read them. This will come as news to the countless researchers worldwide who are denied access daily to the articles in the journals their institution cannot afford, and to the authors of those articles, who are losing all that potential research impact.
   Search engines
find it all, tantalizingly, but access depends on being able to afford the subscription tolls. Esposito also says OA is just for a small circle of peers: How big does he imagine the actual usership of most journal articles is?
   Esposito applauds the American Chemical Society (ACS) executives' bonuses for publishing profit, even though ACS is supposed to be a Learned Society devoted to maximizing research access, usage and progress, not a commercial company devoted to deriving profit from restricting research access only to those who can afford to pay them for it (and for their bonuses).
   Esposito describes the efforts of researchers to inform their institutions and funders of the benefits of mandating OA as lobbying, but he does not attach a name to what anti-OA publishers are doing when they hire expensive pit-bull consultants to spread disinformation about OA in an effort to prevent OA self-archiving from being mandated. (Another surcharge for researchers, in addition to paying for their bonuses?)
   Esposito finds it tautological that surveys report that authors would comply with OA mandates, but he omits to mention that over 80% of those researchers report that they would self-archive
willingly if mandated. (And where does Esposito think publishers would be without existing publish-or-perish mandates?)
   Esposito is right, though, that OA is a matter of time -- but not reading time, as he suggests. The only thing standing between the research community and 100% OA to all of its peer-reviewed research article output is the time it takes to do the few keystrokes per article it takes to provide OA. That is what the mandates (and the metrics that reward them) are meant to accomplish at long last.

Joseph Esposito is an independent management consultant (the "portable CEO") with a long history in publishing, specializing in "interim management and strategy work at the intersection of content and digital technology."
In an interview by The Scientist (a follow-up to his article, "The nautilus: where - and how - OA will actually work"), Esposito says Open Access (OA) is "research spam" -- making unrefereed or low quality research available to researchers whose real problem is not insufficient access but insufficient time.
In arguing for his "model," which he calls the "nautilus model," Esposito manages to fall (not for the first time) into many of the longstanding fallacies that have been painstakingly exposed and corrected for years in the self-archiving FAQ. (See especially Peer Review, Sitting Pretty, and Info-Glut.)
Like so many others, with and without conflicting interests, Esposito does the double conflation (1) of OA publishing (Gold OA) with OA self-archiving (of non-OA journal articles) (Green OA), and (2) of peer-reviewed postprints of published articles with unpublished preprints. It would be very difficult to call OA research "spam" if Esposito were to state, veridically, that Green OA self-archiving means making all articles published in all peer-reviewed journals (whether Gold or not) OA. (Hence either all research is spam or OA is not spam after all!).
Instead, Esposito implies that OA is only or mainly for unrefereed or low quality research, which is simply false: OA's explicit target is the peer-reviewed, published postprints of all the 2.5 million articles published annually in all the planet's 25,000 peer-reviewed journals, from the very best to the very worst, without exception. (The self-archiving of pre-refereeing preprints is merely an optional supplement, a bonus; it is not what OA is about, or for.)
Esposito says researchers' problem is not access to journal articles: They already have that via their institution's journal subscriptions; their real problem is not having the time to read those articles, and not having the search engines that pick out the best ones.
Tell that to the countless researchers worldwide who are denied access daily to the specific articles they need in the journals to which their institution cannot afford to subscribe. (No institution comes anywhere near being able to subscribe to all 25,000, and many are closer to 250.)
And tell it also to the authors of all those articles to which all those would-be users are being denied access; their articles are being denied all that research impact. Ask users and authors alike whether they are happy with affordability being the "filter" determining what can and cannot be accessed. Search engines find it all for them, tantalizingly, but whether they can access it depends on whether their institutions can afford a subscription.
Esposito says OA is just for a small circle of peers ("6? 60? 600? but not 6000"): How big does he imagine the actual usership of most of the individual 2.5 million annual journal articles to be? Peer-reviewed research is an esoteric, peer-to-peer process, for the contents of all 25,000 journals: research is conducted and published, not for royalty income, but so that it can be used, applied and built upon by all interested peer specialists and practitioners, to the benefit of the tax-payers who fund their research; the size of the specialties varies, but none are big, because research itself is not big (compared to trade, and trade publication).
Esposito applauds the American Chemical Society (ACS) executives' bonuses for publishing profit, oblivious to the fact that the ACS is supposed to be a Learned Society devoted to maximizing research access, usage and progress, not a commercial company devoted to deriving profit from restricting research access only to those who can afford to pay them for it.
Esposito also refers (perhaps correctly) to researchers' amateurish efforts to inform their institutions and funders of the benefits of mandating OA as lobbying -- passing in silence over the fact that the real lobbying pro's are the wealthy anti-OA publishers who hire expensive pit-bull consultants to spread disinformation about OA in an effort to prevent Green OA from being mandated.
Esposito finds it tautological that surveys report that authors would comply with OA mandates ("it's not news that people would comply with a requirement"), but he omits to mention that most researchers surveyed recognised the benefits of OA, and over 80% reported they would self-archive willingly if it was mandated, only 15% stating they would do so unwillingly. (One wonders whether Esposito also finds the existing and virtually universal publish-or-perish mandates of research institutions and funders tautological -- and where he thinks the publishers for whom he consults would be without those mandates.)

Esposito is right, though, that OA is a matter of time -- but not reading time, as he suggests. The only thing standing between the research community and 100% OA to all of its peer-reviewed research output is the time it takes to do a few keystrokes per article. That, and only that, is what the mandates are all about, for busy, overloaded researchers: Giving those few keystrokes the priority they deserve, so they can at last start reaping the benefits -- in terms of research access and impact -- that they desire. The outcome is optimal and inevitable for the research community; it is only because this was not immediately obvious that the outcome has been so long overdue.
But the delay has been in no small part also because of the conflicting interests of the journal publishing industry for which Esposito consults. So it is perhaps not surprising that he should perceive it otherwise, unperturbed if things continue at a (nautilus) snail's pace for as long as possible...
Stevan Harnad
American Scientist Open Access Forum

Posted by Stevan Harnad in Publishing Lobby at 11:24 | Comments (0)

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