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RE: NIH Public Access Mandate Passes Senate
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: NIH Public Access Mandate Passes Senate
- From: "Armbruster, Chris" <Chris.Armbruster@EUI.eu>
- Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 18:57:03 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Intervention on cost of open access: arXiv, SSRN and RePEc estimate their 'first copy costs' at $1-5. They provide services that are free to authors and readers, including sophisticated literature awareness tools and statistics. They do not organise peer review, editing and copy-editing. But consider the difference to the average first copy costs estimated by stm/ALPSP of $3500 or charged by Springer Open Choice ($3000) or PLoS and BioMed Central (from $515 to $2750). Surely several hundred dollars per article will on average be enough to provide sophisticated certification and editing services currently not available from repositories. On that basis, it would be possible to save libraries millions of dollars if open access publishing reform were done right. I have argued as much in a recent article in Learned Publishing: <http://dx.doi.org/10.1087/095315107X239627> (OA embargo 12 months, pre-print as *Society Publishing, the Internet and Open Access: Shifting Mission-Orientation from Content Holding to Certification and Navigation Services?* available at <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3D997819> Intervention on open access strategy: Many proponents of the green and the gold road have lost sight of what open access was meant to strategically accomplish: enhance access, inclusion and impact. The big disciplinary repositories like arXiv, SSRN and RePEc, but also Citeseer and others are models of enhancing access, inclusion and impact in ways that: - Green OA by means of institutional repositories (expensive digital doubling of research articles that aren't even originals but only 'dirty' copies); and - Gold OA by means of hybrid publishing (interspersion of OA in otherwise closed journals for which publishers continue to hoard content) will never be. Intervention on mandating: Mandates may be legitimate as collective action if they secure the further progress of science (and this includes establishing a more efficient publishing system). Mandates may also be in the best interest of the author (consider as analogy mandatory car/driver insurance). Moreover, in the present circumstances, transfer of copyright agreements for research articles are not 'negotiated' individually between the author and the publisher but simply sent out as default by publishers in the reasonnable expectation that they may thus lock away the content and maximise their rents. In these circumstances, research funding councils, universities and research libraries have an understandable and justified collective interest in altering the standard copyright contract to ensure that the research literature becomes available more cheaply and with extensive use and re-use permissions (e.g. for text and data mining). I have argued as much in a piece that won the Yale A2K2 writing competition in 2007. The article will shortly be forthcoming in the International Journal of Communication Law and Policy, but in the meantime the pre-print *Cyberscience and the Knowledge-Based Economy, Open Access and Trade Publishing: from Contradiction to Compatibility with Nonexclusive Copyright Licensing* may be found here: <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3D938119> Chris Armbruster
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