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Re: New US Bill re. Copyright/Federal Funding
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Re: New US Bill re. Copyright/Federal Funding
- From: "Marc Brodsky" <brodsky@aip.org>
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2008 17:57:23 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
There seem to be some contradictions here. On one hand the it's OK for the government to usurp the rights of authors as a condition of funding, while on the other hand a complaint is made about the publishers having contracted for those rights in exchange for their services. The facts are that it costs to provide publishing services and that the government in demanding access to the "extrinsic" value added by publishers is asking for more than just a report of what it has funded. Many publishers have oft repeated that the government is welcome to ask its funded researchers for such reports, untarnished by whatever value and cost is added by the publishers (or the authors often on their own time after their funding has been exhausted). However NIH, as Dr. Zerhouni reiterated in his recent testimony to Congress, does not want to show the public the untrustworthy unreviewed reports without the value added by the publishers who do essential peer review - and let me add, some other tasks that may have some value like the stamp of the journal brand and prestige (if any), editorial feedback, distribution, copyediting, linking, discoverability, posting of free abstracts and searching, errata, archiving, etc. Of course, not only does it cost to provide publishing services, it is also a marketing opportunity for some publishers and a service opportunity for others like university presses and learned societies - and sometimes commercial publishers. The opportunity is exemplified by a wide variety of business models for all concerned: authors, publishers, libraries, readers, governments, foundations, etc. These models have changed drastically in the last decade and all stakeholders have opportunities to experiment with different ones. As an past researcher, author, research administrator, library funder, and publisher, I personally worry about the heavy hand of government tampering with dynamically changing experiments to favor models that limit choices and biases the publishing process away from one dependent on buyer evaluation of a journal worth. Respectfully with apologies for the long windedness of an email response, Marc Brodsky >>> From: Peter Hirtle <pbh6@cornell.edu> To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu> Date: 9/24/2008 7:35 PM Subject: Re: New US Bill re. Copyright/Federal Funding At 04:01 AM 9/23/2008, Sandy Thatcher wrote: >As a footnote, I would add that university presses are concerned >about the government's move to make the papers of the Founding >Fathers, as published with editorial apparatus by a number of >presses, freely available on the Web without compensation to the >presses or editors, whose work has been supported only in part >by federal funding and in substantial part by private parties >also. This kind of expropriation would severely undermine the >ability of presses to continue publishing these valuable papers. There is reason to be concerned about this initiative, but not for the reasons that Sandy outlines. You can see my blog posting called "Free the Founding Fathers!" at http://blog.librarylaw.com/librarylaw/2008/06/free-the-foundi.html for the details, but the heart of the problem is that NARA seems to feel that the best way for people to get access to volumes whose editing and often publication costs have already been paid for is by having people subscribe to expensive university press delivery systems that limit how the work can be used. There is no question that the editorial work of the projects has been top-notch, if sorely underutilized. Similarly, some university presses are providing useful interfaces with value-added features that are well worth the subscription costs. There is no reason, however, that the government should not also take advantage of its license (a condition of providing the grant) to make this material available for free. If editorial projects do not like the government's license, they should not have accepted the editorial funding - just as publishers who do not like the NIH mandate should decline to publish articles funded by NIH (rather than trying to interfere with the author's rights as the copyright owner to license things as he or she sees fit). Peter B. Hirtle CUL Intellectual Property Officer Scholarly Resources and Special Collections Cornell University Library Ithaca, NY 14853-5301 peter.hirtle@cornell.edu http://www.copyright.cornell.edu
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