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Re: AAP Statement Regarding the NIH Policy



It should be clear that the stance taken by the AAP is not taken by all publishers. In the view of BioMed Central, a non-subsidised private company, the NIH policy is perfectly compatible with free market investment into publishing. Even a policy which would allow no delay at all in openness is compatible with private enterprise and free market conditions. Open access publishing, where payment takes place for the service of publishing and unlimited dissemination rather than for access, even brings back competition, a free market condition if there ever was one. It fosters a service-oriented publishing model which aims to achieve universal accessibility of published scientific research results, to the benefit of the scientific community itself as well as of anyone else in society who has an interest. In contrast, the traditional subscription-based publishing model is based on the premise that the information itself should be a sale-able commodity (although it is acquired for free from the originators) and it holds back dissemination of results, keeping instead a monopoloid grip on science communication. This sales-model holds for published material from which the originator aims to derive direct financial benefits, such as textbooks and the like. It does not satisfy the prevailing need for maximum dissemination and visibility of primary research results. Perhaps AAP members could start to consider becoming service providers instead of 'copyright mongers' for the primary research they publish?

Jan Velterop