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Re: Fair's fair



I covered this topic in an essay a few years ago, "The Devil You Don't
Know," published in FirstMonday:

<http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue9_8/esposito/index.html>

FirstMonday is an OA publication, BTW, which is my preferred venue. I have been insisting all along that I am an OA advocate. Note that in the "Devil" essay, I outlined a plan for an economically sustainable form of OA. The very same plan is now being rolled out in PLoS's latest offering. I have tried to put OA into a broader context of scholarly communications in a forthcoming issue of The Journal of Electronic Publishing in an article entitled "The Wisdom of Oz" (Jan. '07, I believe). I am sorry to burden readers of this list with citations to my own writings, but I cannot let stand the implication that I am somehow dodging the hard questions.

Joe Esposito

On 10/27/06, David Prosser <david.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk> wrote:
Joe

I note that you have picked on my facetious opening so as to
avoid the main point.  What is the mechanism under which a move
to open access will cause a flood of new papers so leading to
greatly increased costs?  You tell us that ' Open Access will
significantly increase the cost of scholarly communications by
creating incentives for production.' I've explained why I think
there will not be significant new incentives to publish, could
you explain why you think there will be?

Best wishes

David C Prosser PhD
Director
SPARC Europe

-----Original Message-----
[mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Joseph J. Esposito
Sent: 27 October 2006 01:40
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: Fair's fair

David Prosser said:

"It is always fun to see what new evils open access will be
responsible for - today it is the possible bankrupting of the US.
I'm sure famine and pestilence will not be far behind."

I would be interested to know how much library expenditures have
declined since the advent of the Open Access movement.

Joe Esposito