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NIH Public Access Mandate Passes Senate



I can't speak to the bill's expectations regarding a veto, but I am troubled that none of the questions that are at the center of this discussion (center as defined by yours truly) have come up anywhere that I have seen. So, my list of questions:

1. Do you believe an author should have the right to ownership of his or her own work? That right would include the ability to charge for access if anyone is interested in participating in a market. Or should an author (at least of scholarly materials) have no presumption that he or she owns his written work?

2. If you are comfortable with #1 (that is, you support an author's choice to assert traditional copyright), do you believe an author should be able to transfer that right to another entity, whether a publisher or any other institution? Does an author have the right to enter into a contract concerning his copyrights?

3. Most academic authors do their work while being compensated by others--a university, for example, or a grant-giving body. Should that fact alone (being paid to write up research) be sufficient reason to assert that the copyrights belong to the funding body? In effect, is an academic author's writing a work for hire under the copyright law? (A corporate employee who writes materials or software or whatever does so as work for hire.)

4. If you take the position in #3, should the work-for-hire status extend to other intellectual property created while in the employ of a university? Patents? Textbooks? If textbooks (which in some instances literally provide hundreds of thousands of dollars in royalties to authors who teach at universities) are to be covered by work-for-hire, how will this policy be introduced to faculty? Also, how would you handle related activity such as consulting? Is this all work for hire?

The principle that sits behind all these questions is that of authors' rights. The open access movement is all about readers' rights, but should an author have the right to own the fruits of his own labor and the right to contract for the sale of that work?

Incidentally, while I personally lean toward points ##1 and 2, the case for #3 is not unreasonable. I simply can't square it with #4. Someone else may have the privilege of telling the faculty of the Stanford Business School that they have to turn over their consulting income (including stock options) to the university.

Best,

Joe Esposito

----- Original Message -----
From: "Rick Anderson" <rick.anderson@utah.edu>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2007 6:48 PM
Subject: RE: NIH Public Access Mandate Passes Senate

This is certainly good news and I don't want to throw a wet blanket on things -- but how likely is it that President Bush would sign this bill into law, assuming it gets through both houses with the requirement language intact?

---
Rick Anderson
Assoc. Dir. for Scholarly Resources & Collections
Marriott Library
University of Utah
rick.anderson@utah.edu