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Correcting Stevan Harnad's Misrepresentation
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Correcting Stevan Harnad's Misrepresentation
- From: "Joseph J. Esposito" <espositoj@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 17:47:23 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Sigh. Stevan Harnad wrote: > I kept resisting the posting of a message that amounts to > "nyah, nyah" but this is too rich: 25 Green OA self-archiving > mandates by funders worldwide, including NIH, 6/7 of RCUK and > ERC, and 25 institutional mandates, including Harvard, Stanford > and CERN, and Joe and Jan think the future of green is bleak?" JE: I have never said the future of OA is bleak. I have said precisely the opposite, that OA is inevitable. And Harnad knows this, but insists on misrepresenting my position. I say he knows this because he wrote a long and vitriolic response to an article of mine several years ago; that article has been cited on this list before ("The Devil You Don't Know," http://firstmonday.org). In that piece I asserted that "Open Access is the future." Consider how bizarre this is: Harnad writes a long attack on an article that mostly agrees with him. What I have said is that OA in itself is unimportant and that it inevitably will drive up costs. The Harvard faculty can mandate OA for itself (and, as far as I know, it is within the faculty's right to do so), but it won't make people read more thoughtfully. The NIH can mandate OA for materials based on research it underwites (and why not? They paid for it), but it won't improve the quality of the material. I think it is highly doubtful (but neither proven nor provable) that the OA articles mandated by the Wellcome Trust (for research it has funded, etc., etc.) will yield more citations or higher impacts than had the material been toll access. OA doesn't make us smarter, it does not improve the economy of the United Kingdom (one of Harnad's claims of a couple years ago, if I understood the argument correctly), and it does not "democratize" knowledge or research, except in Lake Woebegone, where all the children are above average. Thus, even as OA is becoming increasingly widespread, the rationale for supporting it becomes weaker and weaker. This is the house of cards: not OA itself, but the reasons to support it. What is really needed in the research community is not open access but "open access follow-through." But this follow-through applies whether documents are OA or toll access. And that is why OA is not that important. Harnad is solving the wrong problem. Joe Esposito
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