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Pricing/License Translucency: A Proposal for Publishers and Libraries
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>, "SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum" <SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU>
- Subject: Pricing/License Translucency: A Proposal for Publishers and Libraries
- From: "Rick Anderson" <rickand@unr.edu>
- Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2006 19:35:22 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Everyone is probably sick to death of this topic by now, but I'm going to risk starting a new thread about pricing secrecy and pricing transparency. This message will end with a question for my librarian colleagues, so I hope that those who are tired of the topic but who may have an opinion on the question will soldier through to the end and send a response (either directly to me or to the list). Now that I've had a week or so to reflect on my experience with Nature and its demand for total secrecy of pricing and license terms, and on my on-list conversation with Peter Banks and Joe Esposito and others about the implications of total pricing transparency, it's occurred to me that there may be room for a compromise on which both publishers and libraries can agree. It seems to me that there is really no reason why we should have to choose between Pricing Blackout (the position of Nature and a few other publishers on the fringe of this issue) and Pricing Transparency (as characterized by Joe's "public posting of prices/licenses" scenario). I'd like to propose a compromise, which we might call Pricing Translucency: suppose a license agreement were to contain a clause like this: "Subject to applicable law, Licensee shall refrain from publicizing or otherwise broadly distributing the terms of this License (including pricing) in any public forum." It seems to me that a term like this should satisfy both the desire of publishers not to see public broadcast of the results of their individual price and license negotiations, while also allowing librarians the desired leeway to talk to each other individually about their negotiation experiences. I don't know of any librarian who wants to take out a full-page ad in the New York Times saying what price she ended up getting from Nature; most of us just want to be able to answer individual colleagues who ask us questions. I was going to ask the publishers who participate or lurk on this list to say whether they think a clause like this would be acceptable, but I think that question is more or less answered by the fact that the vast majority of publishers don't put confidentiality clauses in their licenses. What I do wonder, though, is whether librarians would generally find such a clause acceptable. Any thoughts? (Off-list replies welcome; if there's interest, I can summarize for the list without identifying respondents.) ---- Rick Anderson Dir. of Resource Acquisition University of Nevada, Reno Libraries rickand@unr.edu
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