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Harold Varmus: "Self-Archiving is Not Open Access"
- To: AmSci Forum <american-scientist-open-access-forum@amsci.org>
- Subject: Harold Varmus: "Self-Archiving is Not Open Access"
- From: Stevan Harnad <harnad@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 8 Jun 2006 20:27:55 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
** Apologies for Cross-Posting ** If you wonder why there is internecine squabbling within the Open Access (OA) Community, you need go no further than Richard Poynder's latest OA interview (a skillful, revealing elicitation, as always), this time of Nobel Laureate and PLoS co-founder, Harold Varmus: http://poynder.blogspot.com/2006/06/interview-with-harold-varmus.html RICHARD POYNDER: "[T]here has been a long-standing and vigorous debate within the OA movement about the respective merits of the so-called Green and Gold roads. The debate seems to revolve around the issue of whether it is better for OA advocates to put all their energy into the creation of new open access journals, or to focus on lobbying research funders and governments to require researchers to self-archive the papers they have published in subscription journals. What are your views on that debate?" HAROLD VARMUS: "My views are very clear: at this point self-archiving is not Open Access. One of the important components of the definition of Open Access that we have all agreed on is that research information should be placed in a searchable database. Right now the only way to be confident that you can do that effectively is by using a large public digital library like PubMed Central." I am spared having to respond (yet again) to this egregious nonsense by Peter Suber's spare reply in Open Access News: PETER SUBER: "Varmus is wrong to say that self-archiving is not OA. OA is a kind of access, not a kind of venue, and 'OA repositories' deliver this kind of access as well as 'OA journals', and distributed repositories deliver it as well as central repositories. Repositories certainly count as 'searchable databases'." http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2006_06_04_fosblogarchive.html#114960586121434685 To see what definition of Open Access "we have all agreed on," please see the BOAI definition of OA, first coined by the BOAI (Peter Suber, principal drafter), 2001: http://www.soros.org/openaccess/read.shtml Nor is the (profound) disagreement about the definition of OA merely semiological quibbling. The difference is strategic, and it has profound practical implications for OA (sic), and how soon we manage to reach it. Harold's continuing confusions about (what was eventually dubbed) OA began early on (1999) http://www.nih.gov/about/director/ebiomed/com0509.htm#harn45 but certainly not as early as OA itself began, which was in the 1980's, with computer scientists self-archiving their papers in Anonymous FTP Archives. The rest of the road to the optimal and inevitable outcome is history still in the making (an outcome that some OA advocates are hastening and facilitating; others, alas, rather less than they might if they listened a little more attentively and reflected a bit more: The Midas Touch can be the Kiss of Death sometimes...) Harnad, S. (2006) Opening Access by Overcoming Zeno's Paralysis. To appear in: Jacobs, N., (Ed) Open Access: Key Strategic, Technical and Economic Aspects. Chandos Publishing (Oxford) Limited, Chapter 8. http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/12094/ Stevan Harnad
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