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Re: "Accepted Manuscript"
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: "Accepted Manuscript"
- From: Greg Tananbaum <gtananbaum@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2009 17:20:31 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Sandy, I would file this objection under the "queasiness in the face of authority erosion" category. In your example it is not as if the citing author has referenced an entirely different source with different conclusions, methodology, and so forth. In most cases the repository version will be a reasonable proxy for the "version of record". Reasonable people could conclude that some sloppiness is a price well worth paying in return for the increased accessibility. Note that I am not making an Information Wants to be Free argument here. Rather, I think it is simply worth acknowledging that in many cases, information *is* free, or at least is certain versions of it are. Scholarly communication is trending away from its tradition of order. I am not sure that chaos looms, but certainly at least a little messiness does. Repositories sit alongside established journals. Google is used as a proxy for catalogued databases. Perhaps soon concepts that were once presented formally at annual conferences will be twittered out in 140-character bursts. Can we as scholarly communication professionals stop this trend? Should we even try? To me, these are among the most fascinating questions our field faces. In a world trending toward Oscar Madison, how does Felix Unger find his place? Best, Greg -- Greg Tananbaum Consulting Services at the Intersection of Technology, Content, & Academia (510) 295-7504 greg@scholarnext.com http://www.scholarnext.com
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