LIBLICENSE-L Archives

LibLicense-L Discussion Forum

LIBLICENSE-L@LISTSERV.CRL.EDU

Options: Use Classic View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]>
Mon, 23 Jul 2012 20:53:07 -0400
text/plain (97 lines)
From: Sandy Thatcher <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Sun, 22 Jul 2012 23:17:40 -0500

Meanwhile, I might add, universities continue to underinvest in their
presses, or close them down, thus weakening the publishing
infrastructure that higher education directly controls. If commercial
publishers opt to invest elsewhere, as Joe surmises, higher education
will be left with fewer options than ever and will be forced to rely
on such less robust and sophisticated systems like institutional
repositories. This may become the ultimate revenge of unintended
consequences that the OA movement brings about.

Sandy Thatcher



> From: Joseph Esposito <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2012 01:28:08 -0700
>
> I really can't agree with Fred about most of this.  For one, the idea
> that the work of peer review is somehow free because many of the
> reviewers are unpaid displays not only profound ignorance of how peer
> review systems are managed but, worse, a complete lack of curiosity.
> But if Fred or any one else wants to place articles in a repository
> somewhere, why, go right ahead.  I don't know what problem that is
> supposed to solve, but no one should get in the way of a man with a
> fixed idea.
>
> But in the end, the fact that so-called Green OA has no meaningful
> economic model is irrelevant.  That which is not sustainable cannot
> and will not be sustained.  It will simply go away.  If the articles
> deposited in repositories cannibalize the publishers' versions (where
> such exist), then over time the published versions will go away.  If
> "pure" repository publishing is what we have left, then it will
> attempt to justify its costs, which will surprise many with how large
> and unexpected they are.  Even OA repositories with enormous community
> support such as arXiv run into the problem that from time to time
> significant investments have to be made in platforms.  Volunteer labor
> does many things truly well (think of Wikipedia), but a full
> publishing service of the kind contemplated here may be a steep climb.
>
> The notion that research publishing--alone among all things in the
> world--can somehow sit outside the economy is a strange idea,
> something that will be studied by anthropologists years from now as a
> characteristic myth of our era.
>
> What will happen, what is happening already, is that investment in
> publishing will shift to new areas, especially those that are most
> resistant to copying and that continue to provide a return on capital.
>  It can be no other way:  this is the way the world works.
>
> None of this is happy news for the commercial publishers that have
> looked to libraries for huge sums of money; I am not arguing for their
> position.  They will have to invest heavily in new businesses instead
> of harvesting past investments.
>
> Joe Esposito
>
> On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 3:31 PM, LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>  From: Frederick Friend <[log in to unmask]>
>>  Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2012 12:12:38 +0100
>>
>>  I cannot let pass without challenge the STM Association's statement
>>  that "Green Open Access has no business model to support the
>>  publications on which it crucially depends". Firstly deposit of a
>>  research report by an author in an institutional or subject repository
>>  does not depend upon publication in a journal. It is a separate route
>>  to the dissemination of publicly-funded research and could operate
>>  world-wide whether or not any STM journals were published at all.
>>  Secondly green open access does have a business model which is
>>  entirely within research and higher education budgets. Repositories
>>  are supported by their institution or funding agency, and a fully
>>  peer-reviewed version of a research article could be supplied on open
>>  access using the time of reviewers currently supplied without charge
>>  to publishers.
>>
>>  A further quality stamp could be provided by the institution or
>>  organization funding the repository and appropriate metadata attached
>>  to the version to indicate that it could be regarded as a "version of
>
>  > record". Few people are currently advocating a total switch away from
>>
>>  publishing in journals to a total reliance upon repositories (although
>>  it would be feasible), but as both the European Commission and
>>  Research Councils UK acknowledge in their policies the two models can
>>  live alongside one another. The UK Government, in accepting the
>>  unbalanced recommendations from the Finch Group, has made a decision
>>  which is bad for researchers and bad for taxpayers. It may not even be
>>  good for publishers in the long-term, once the full implications of
>>  the UK Government's decision are worked through.
>>
>>  Fred Friend
>>  Honorary Director Scholarly Communication UCL
>>  http://www.friendofopenaccess.org.uk

ATOM RSS1 RSS2