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Re: Subscription to Open Access Transition



Well, David, if it's evidence you want, you could provide it? You write that if you were still a publisher, you would migrate to OA because you see it has a better long-term future. Take the challenge. Become a publisher (again) and show all the skeptics!

Joe Esposito

----- Original Message -----
From: "David Prosser" <david.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Thursday, July 27, 2006 4:31 PM
Subject: RE: Subscription to Open Access Transition


Joe

Well, in this case there ain't no global warming - yet! We have a proposed mechanism (as the proportion of free material approaches 100% there will be a fall in subscriptions) but to date the evidence - unfortunately only in one subject area - shows that hasn't happened. Thoughtful people with experience in the field might find that odd, but it's true and so I'm afraid people will continue to talk about it. They will also point out that the melting subscriptions we have seen over the past two decades have had nothing at all to do with self-archiving.

Now, does that mean that sensible publishers shouldn't worry? No, of course not. As you say, they have a responsibility to model potential futures and changes in the publishing environment and to take action based on what they see is the most likely direction of change. If I were still a publisher I would be looking to move my journals to open access as soon as I could as I think the open access business models offer a stronger long-term future than subscription models. But I would hope that I would base my decisions on evidence as well as experience.

David