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practical solution
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: practical solution
- From: Richard Feinman <RFeinman@downstate.edu>
- Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2006 23:18:57 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Did I mention author-side payment?. If there is infinite money there are no payments from anybody but... If you insist on a practical solution let me explain what it will be like: There will be a central publishing organization that will provide money for publishing scholarly articles. The publishing process will be streamlined and well understood and because it will be basically running a website, will not be hugely expensive. Journals can apply to the CPO (the way individuals and organizations apply for research grants) and they can receive money on a cost plus basis (with a cap). The money for the CPO will come from government agencies who will use the per centage of their funds that they had previously used for publishing. The money will come also from libraries who,while in effect buying publications for the world, will see it as their basic mission. The money will come from corporations who had previously subscribed to technical journals. The money will come from private foundations and individuals who are overwhelmed with the prospect of being part of the publishing revolution that brings open access to the world. The money will come from Societies who will be expected to contribute something for publication of their journals. Publishers will have to be happy with a normal (but more reliable) income. Editors will have to get lower salaries but mostly everybody will be happier. Now before you rush off to think of a million things that are wrong with this proposal try to focus on one or two aspects that might be developed in a positive way because, taking previous comments for a yes, this is what we all want. Especially see if here isn't some aspect of this that could be implemented in an approximate way right away. Whaddaya say? RF Richard D. Feinman, Professor of Biochemistry <Toby.GREEN@oecd.org> Sent by: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu 06/27/06 09:25 PM Please respond to liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject RE: Take it all for a yes, and on to Q.2a. Richard, While doing some coppicing last weekend, I thought about your question 1 and realised there was another answer - if there is an unlimited amount of money available, why not give it to readers so they can buy what they need without any limits? This would give the same result as unlimited author-side payments but not disrupt the current publishing system. Now, Q2a - I think the question would be more interesting if you looked outside the relatively well-funded area of biomedical research where it is well known that publishing costs are only a small proportion of total funding (the same being true in physics and other 'big' sciences). Why not try economics or education or any of the social sciences or humanities where research funding is limited? Toby -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Richard Feinman Sent: 27 June, 2006 2:38 AM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Take it all for a yes, and on to Q.2a. I didn't mean it to be a mental exercise. The point was to determine if we all agree that OA is desirable. In the past, on this list and elsewhere, people have made the argument that it is not needed -- we have all the information we need, or the general public would be hurt by too much information;we need to edit for them., etc. It has struck me and others, that these didn't make sense, or were compromised by conflicts of interest. I asked originally whether any of these arguments made sense except for people who stood to gain from maintaining the current system and what argument against OA's desirability. The idea is that you can't ask about feasibility, unless you know whether you want to do it. It thought it was pretty simple idea. Should we build an atomic bomb, should we have the bathroom redone, etc.? Once you know whether you want to do it, you can ask how much it costs or how hard it is to do or whether it is even possible, but first you have to know if you want to do it. A what if question, if you like,or as Nietzsche put it: we can do with any how if we have a why. The fact that hardly anybody wanted to play and insisted that I cannot even pose the question, and that it is in the ballpark with world peace and end to world hunger, suggests we all agree it is desirable to have OA. So, I will take if for a yes. Now we can go on to Q.2 Q. 2. Richard Roberts, among others, has suggested that the money currently spent on publishing only needs to be re-directed towards OA. Now, since everybody seems to agree that author-pays means largely author's grant-pays and since NIH is most accessible and major funder in biomedicinee: 2a. Is it possible to find out how what per centage of the NIH research grants go for author page charges, subscriptions, if anybody still buys reprints and other costs that are directed to publishing? Richard D. Feinman, Professor of Biochemistry
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