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RE: Fair-Use/Schmair-Use...
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: RE: Fair-Use/Schmair-Use...
- From: "Velterop, Jan, Springer UK" <Jan.Velterop@springer.com>
- Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 14:13:06 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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Peter Hirtle is right. Since a long time I have held the view that -- at least in the realm of peer-reviewed research publication -- copyright, particularly its transfer from author to publisher, is essentially used as a proxy for money. Often combined with real money in the form of e.g. page charges. Together, the transfer of copyright and real money charges are the price an author pays for the service of having his research formally published in a peer-review journal, which he needs, inter alia, for career and prospective funding purposes. One could see the use of copyright as a proxy for money as inappropriate, but certainly in the print era it was a pragmatic and workable way of supporting the system of peer-reviewed formal research journals. Copyright, the property of the publisher after transfer, was converted into real money by exploiting the exclusive right to sell (access to) the material. In the web world, the situation is different. First of all, authors can quite easily disseminate their articles themselves on the web. That doesn't make them formally published in a peer-reviewed journal, but it does the job of spreading the knowledge. This is what preprints do, or at least can do (terribly antiquated word, 'preprints', but let's ignore that for now). Remains the issue of formal, official, publishing in a peer-reviewed journal. On the 'other planet' authors seem to expect publishers of journals to formally publish their articles in peer-reviewed journals (the reputations of which often took a long time to build up) for free, and to regard it as a right subsequently to be able just to add the label "formally published in journal XYZ" to their preprints in order to give those the needed authority and trustworthiness. The "Hop on the bus, Gus, the other suckers have paid for us" school of thought. Open access is fundamentally incompatible with the use of copyright as a proxy for money to pay for formal peer-reviewed publication. I favour the transition to paying with plain money, and open access will be the entirely natural outcome of that. Technical and procedural problems exist, to be sure. But if the choice is between trying to solve those or to evade or even deny them, my vote goes to solving them. Jan Velterop
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