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Re: The UK report, press coverage, and the Green and Gold Roads toOpen Access
- To: AmSci Forum <american-scientist-open-access-forum@amsci.org>
- Subject: Re: The UK report, press coverage, and the Green and Gold Roads toOpen Access
- From: Stevan Harnad <harnad@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2004 19:39:08 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
The press just keeps on missing the mark! "American and British Lawmakers Endorse Open-Access Publishing" Andrea Foster and Lila Guterman Chronicle of Higher Education, July 30, 2004 http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v50/i47/47a01302.htm > "In a double coup for the open-access movement this month, > committees of the U.S. Congress and British Parliament recommended > that papers resulting from government-financed research be made > available free. The committees recommended that the U.S. and British > governments require researchers to deposit in free, online archives > any articles that arise from research sponsored, respectively, > by the National Institutes of Health and any British agency. So far, so good. That part was correct. But then: > The British committee further recommended that journal publishers > adopt an open-access model in which authors would pay to publish > and subscription fees would be eliminated. Both governments are > expected to act on the committees' recommendations this year." No, the British committee did not recommend that; on the contrary, they explicitly refrained from recommending it and recommended only further experimentation with it, along with funding to help pay author-institutions costs for OA Publishing. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/399/39903.htm Nor is the title of the story correct: "American and British Lawmakers Endorse Open-Access Publishing" "Endorsement" is ambiguous. What, if anything, both the Americans and the British endorsed was Open Access (OA), not OA Publishing. They recommended mandating OA *Provision* through author/institution self-archiving of published articles (the "green" road to OA), not OA Publishing (the golden road to OA). Stevan Harnad
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