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EMBO Journal & Reports -- Price Increases for 2004
- To: lis-e-journals@jiscmail.ac.uk, liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: EMBO Journal & Reports -- Price Increases for 2004
- From: kaemper@ub.uni-stuttgart.de
- Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2003 20:21:00 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
[Distributed via lis-e-journals and liblicense-l, please excuse duplicate posting] Dear list members, In 2004, EMBO Journal will be transferred from Oxford University Press to Nature Publishing Group, joining its sister publication EMBO reports which was transferred in 2003, cf. Nature Publishing Group's press release of August 2003, http://www.nature.com/embojournal/EMBO_press.pdf Several new services like Advance Online Publication will also be introduced, cf. http://www.nature.com/embojournal/aims_scope.html Dual platform hosting - both on HighWire and nature.com - is a welcome feature maximising the services and the choices available to the community. >From 2004 on, a subscription to EMBO journal (24 issues/year) will by default include 12 issues of EMBO reports. While EMBO members will actually see no price increase or even a price reduction for the combined product (2004 price: GBP 160 for Print+Online, GBP 90 for Online only), institutions and their libraries will see a price increase between 30% and 220% depending on the institution's size (as measured by FTE for all science faculties excluding Mathematics, Engineering and Computer Science). The typical increase for institutions around +/- 5000 Sciences FTE will be 110% or 140%. (Prices for Online only are 10% less than prices for Print+Online, if I got correct information from NPG.) Bundling EMBO reports with the highly cited EMBO journal, of course, is a classical way to increase the profitability. In fact, there were many subscribers of EMBO journal which did not consider EMBO Reports to be an absolute "must". So in fact many of us will see an even higher price increase of 80% to 340%. What I find disturbing here is that no one at EMBO or NPG seems to find it necessary to write a letter to subscribers explaining those price increases. Is there any justification for such excessive price increases other than the assumption that the market will bear it? My belief is that the moving force behind the price increase is EMBO as much as the publisher. While some societies actually exert a restraining influence on publisher's pricing policies, it is well known that other societies are driving library prices up as a result of competitive negotiations with publishers. I fear that underfinanced central libraries of universities with two-tiered library systems will be increasingly forced or tempted to leave it to departments or institutes to buy EMBO publications themselves if they get so expensive. Many already do, but the existing institute's subscriptions often are based on a membership or will be converted to such given this price increase. Of course, this is not an optimal solution as more print issues will get distributed than necessary and there will be no possibility to get a site license. Hopefully, more and more EMBO authors will self-archive their publications on institutional servers in order to bridge the 12 months gap between publishing date and free availability at the publishers website or discipline-based repositories like E-BioSci or Pubmed Central so that articles become openly accessible to as many scientists and as early as possible. Several other questions come to mind: 1. What will happen to the free back issues policy readers of both journals enjoyed at the HighWire site (EMBO Journals: free 12 months after publication, EMBO Reports: free after 1 year every January)? Hopefully this policy will be maintained as it has been decided to establish dual platform hosting for both journals. 2. Will EMBO Journal continue to be included in Pubmed Central as a PMC PubLink Journal, an option that requires full submission of published material to PMC, but allows redirects for actual viewing of full-text to the publisher's site? PMC Policies and Guidelines also require that primary research articles must be made available with open access within one year from publication date. (Note that the PMC National Advisory Committee has recently suggested to eliminate the PubLink option for new participating publishers, returning to the original PMC model. Current PubLink journals will be asked to consider allowing all content to be viewable within PMC, cf. the Minutes of the June 25, 2003 meeting. 3. In which form will content of EMBO publications become available to scientists on the future E-BioSci platform? What about open access policy at this site? 4. As open access is an article property (cf. the Bethesda Principles), will authors of EMBO journal be offered the choice to pay for open access to their article (through their funding bodies)? -- Bernd-Christoph Kaemper, Dipl.-Physiker, Bibl.-Rat Fachreferent f�r Physik und Koordination elektronischer Ressourcen Universit�tsbibliothek Stuttgart, Postfach 104941, 70043 Stuttgart Tel +49 711 685-4780, Fax +49 711 685-3502, kaemper@ub.uni-stuttgart.de
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