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Re: PR's 'pit bull' takes on open access: excerpts from article in Nature Magazine
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: PR's 'pit bull' takes on open access: excerpts from article in Nature Magazine
- From: "Charles W. Bailey, Jr." <cwbailey@digital-scholarship.com>
- Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 13:43:53 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Lisa and Joe: Thanks for your replies. I agree that there are a variety of models for how e-journals are published and funded. My comments were about a specific case, not about e-journal publishing in general. I think that it is clear that e-journal publishing costs money. The question is how much money, and that question relates to whether 100% of the infrastructure costs have to be borne by the publisher and the scope and complexity of the publishing effort. For example, it is more difficult and expensive to publish Brain Research than Biodiversity Informatics (an OA journal produced using Open Journal Systems by the Biodiversity Research Center of the University of Kansas). The latter published 7 papers in 1995. It does not appear to charge author fees. If Biodiversity Informatics' publishing activity was like Brain Research's, its publication model would need to change: it would require much more significant infrastructure. The point is this: small-scale, nontraditional publishers have been publishing e-journals since the late 1980s. A look at the Directory of Open Access Journals reveals that many such e-journals are being published today. I suspect that a fair number of them are doing so using subsidized infrastructure, taking advantage of existing physical facilities, computing and networking infrastructure, and organizational services. They are using volunteer editorial labor, whose "real job" salaries are being paid by the host organization or other organizations. Use of open-source e-journal publishing systems may greatly simplify journal production requirements and minimize needed technical support staff. As long as these e-journals' publishing activities are modest and they are freely available (eliminating support costs associated with licensing and access controls as well as minimizing marketing costs) any incremental costs above baseline are likely to be fairly small and easily absorbed. They are not likely to be run like businesses. They are not likely to be concerned with cost accounting issues, and, if they are, it may be difficult to parse out costs, except for easily tallied items such as hours spent on journal activities and dedicated servers (if any). The real question is: If the added costs are fairly small, are they worth tabulating? In a university setting, faculty are likely to be the prime movers of such journals, and faculty don't account for their time in detail, whether they are editing a small OA e-journal or a larger conventional journal. These e-journals' technical infrastructure upgrade costs are likely to be largely addressed by the normal upgrade cycles of their parent organizations. They may have no desire or motivation to publish additional e-journals. So, they are not like Biomed Central, Elsevier, IEEE, Oxford University Press, or PLoS (to pick names at random). Nonetheless, they are e-journal publishers. My aim of late has not been to either praise or damn this type of e-journal publishing, but rather to clarify that it is is at play. This is why some assertions about very low OA e-journal costs can seem nonsensical when viewed from the perspective of larger-scale publishers, be they OA or fee-based publishers: simple, low-volume, small-scale e-journals are being compared to larger, higher-volume, more complex ones. Best Regards, Charles Charles W. Bailey, Jr. Digital Scholarship http://www.digital-scholarship.org/ E-Mail: cwbailey@digital-scholarship.com
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