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RE: Nature's new "post cancellation policy"
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Nature's new "post cancellation policy"
- From: "Daniel Jones" <djones@sfbr.org>
- Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 23:19:20 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I was contacted by our NPG representative earlier this year telling me about their new license and encouraging me to sign and return it soon. In addition, I've received numerous glossy mailings announcing the change in policy. They don't need a signed license until the end of 2006, so I have not signed it yet. In the meantime, I'm hoping they will reconsider their policy, and I'm glad to see some discussion beginning about this issue. As I understand it, the new policy will apply to new subscriptions started with 2007, and subscriptions in place before the end of 2006 will be grandfathered under the old policy. I was encouraged to consider ordering new subscriptions before the end of the year to get the best value. This sounds like marketing hype to me (Have you noticed how much more and aggressive marketing NPG has been doing over the past two years?), but it also suggests to me that they have doubts about their own new policy. Again, as I understand the policy on new subscriptions, you get a rolling 4 years + the current year, and if you want more than that, you will need to license the backfile for the title, AND each year purchase the one year to be added to the archive that rolled off of your current subscription to that title. (I.e., you purchase a new title to begin with vol. 1, 2007, then 5 years later you remember to order the archive so you continue to have access to vol. 1, then every year you remember to purchase the year that rolled off to be added to the archive. Imagine the record keeping on all sides - library:vendor:publisher - and the opportunities for system failure.) As I pointed out to my NPG representative, this is very similar to the model that was abandoned by the American Chemical Society after 2005, and I recommended they contact Adam Chesler at ACS for more details about the ACS decision to change its subscription model. According to my NPG representative, they reviewed the proposed changes with the NPG library advisory council, and no one pointed out any problems with it. In my experience over the last few years, Nature has had problems with the quality of their PDFs, accurate information about subscription start/end dates, and access to current subscriptions, and I have doubts about their ability to handle two subscription models for as many institutional subscribers as they have. There are just too many IFs in their proposed new policy to believe that access will be unaffected. I have not signed the license yet, nor have I ordered any new Nature journals. ======================= Daniel H. Jones, M.L.S. Librarian Preston G. Northrup Memorial Library Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research Tel: 210-258-9426 Fax: 210-670-3313 Email: djones@sfbr.org =======================
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