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LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Mon, 14 Jan 2013 17:09:42 -0500
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From: Heather Morrison <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2013 12:07:01 -0800

Comments on JSTOR's Register and Reading and Early Content:

Register and Read and similar programs raise for me huge privacy
flags. Libraries have gone to considerable efforts to ensure that the
searching and reading behaviour of individual scholars is NOT tracked.

Register and Read looks more like a sales tactic for JSTOR's
pay-per-view than a sincere attempt to move towards open access or
expanded access. Researchers can access a few articles, but if they
want to be able to keep them on their hard drives and make full use of
access under Register and Read, they must purchase a copy. In other
words, it's only free if it's not all that useful, or the number of
real free articles online is actually much, much smaller than what
JSTOR portrays.

Open access is literature that is digital, online, free of charge and
free of most copyright and licensing restrictions (Suber, Overview).
Register and Read does not remotely meet this definition.

Kudos to JSTOR for releasing public domain content on September 6,
2011 (not long after Aaron Swartz downloaded JSTOR content):

http://about.jstor.org/service/early-journal-content

Suggestions for improvement:

Link to the early journal content from the JSTOR main page - where it
is, it is not easy to find.

Work with journals to provide free access to back issues. The journals
participating in Highwire Free are a good model. A large portion
provide free access to back issues, often after one year:
http://highwire.stanford.edu/lists/freeart.dtl

As for Register and Read, I would suggest ignoring JSTOR altogether.
Get in touch with the authors of articles you wish to read and ask
them to put them in their institutional repository - the amount of
work this would take wouldn't be much different, but there would be a
world of difference in the results. JSTOR Register & Read gets you
limited access to an article, just for you; if the author puts the
article in their IR for open access, it is freely available to anyone,
anywhere.

best,

Heather Morrison, PhD
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com

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