[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Taxpayer rights
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Taxpayer rights
- From: Mark Funk <mefunk@mail.med.cornell.edu>
- Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2004 16:07:33 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
In reply to Joe's comments:
In both the print model and the current online model of journals, non-taxpayers outside the U.S. borders can read research articles supported by U.S. taxpayers, so this is not an intriguing geopolitical question.
The NIH proposal should not be tarred with perceived imperfections of various OA models. The proposal does not create an unfunded mandate. The costs for hosting these articles will be borne by the NIH, not the publishers. Further, I do not see how the proposal will drain any capital from scholarly publishing. Why not? Look at the numbers:
*PubMed has 575,283 articles with a publication year of 2003.
*Of these, 62,294 articles had the checktag "Support, U.S., Gov't, P.H.S.," which is used to indicate NIH (and PHS) support for the research.
*If 2003 is at all representative, it appears that around 11% of the articles in PubMed would be affected by the proposal.
I cannot imagine any library or individual cancelling a journal title because 11% of the articles would be available free through PubMed Central. The number of affected articles is so relatively small that publishers should not see cancellations if the proposal is implemented.
The NIH proposal does not radically increase the number of papers in circulation. They are still peer-reviewed by the journals. I also fail to see any connection between NIH grant funding and publishers' costs of peer-review, hosting, and searching.
Perhaps it's a rhetorical question asked of a straw man, but no, nobody believes that depositing a paper in a public archive will be a complete substitute for all that is currently garnered from the formal publication process. Self-archiving, institutional archiving, and the NIH propsal are add-ons to the formal publication process, not a substitute. What the NIH proposal does is increase the availability of U.S. taxpayer-supported research results. It will not save libraries any money, but neither will it be a burden to publishers.
At 12:01 AM -0400 9/1/04, Electronic Content Licensing Discussion wrote:
taxpayers to access the published results of research funded through taxpayer dollars. Which makes sense!From: "Joseph J. Esposito" <espositoj@worldnet.att.net> To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu> Subject: Taxpayer rightsRecently, there has been much discussion about the rights of
sense. Putting aside the intriguing geopolitical question of whether these rights extend beyond American borders to nontaxpayers, the problem with this policy is that it creates an unfunded mandate. Open Access in whatever form (self-archiving, institutional archiving, author-pays online journals, etc.) will drain capital from scholarly publishing, even as it radically increases the number of papers in circulation. Hosting, searching, peer review--all these things cost money. Is the NIH proposing to add these costs to every grant application, costs that will continue to rise with the volume of research? Does anyone really believe that depositing a paper in a national (global?) archive will be a complete substitute for all that is currently garnered from the formal publication process?JE: It makes half-sense or partial sense, but it does not make horse
I commented in an earlier posting that it is "eminently reasonable" for
the NIH to make stipulations as to publication requirements for funded research. That does not make it smart or wise. Joe Esposito
- Prev by Date: Re: pay by the drink journal access
- Next by Date: SAGE Journals Online Is Now Available
- Previous by thread: Re: Taxpayer rights
- Next by thread: pay by the drink journal access
- Index(es):