From: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2018 07:31:32 +0000 Anthony, I agree that the freemium model doesn’t provide everything that SciHub does, but I was responding to Rick’s points about legal and frictionless access. I also know that everyone, when given the chance, likes to download for free, but free-to-read is not a bad option if downloading is a premium feature. As I argued last year (https://goo.gl/SYDxto) Green and Gold don’t seem to be the models that will ever get 100% of scholarly content freely accessible on the day of publication, so it’s time to look for others. Freemium, OECD and Open Editions style, may not be perfect but it means 100% of our content can be read by anyone on day 1 for free. At OECD we are continuing to explore the boundaries of freemium - with making basic PDF versions freely available to download a definite objective - but this is dependent on our finding other ways to provide sufficient premium value from new services for subscribers (or find new income from alternative sources). We’ve tried Gold (but our authors’ funders are not interested), we can see that Green is unsatisfactory - so we’re actively exploring an alternative model and, so far, it’s working well and we believe others should be joining us in this exploration. Toby Green OECD On 20 Feb 2018, at 03:52, LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]> wrote: From: Anthony Watkinson <[log in to unmask]> Date: Mon, 19 Feb 2018 10:19:45 +0000 But SciHub is not just making a read only version available and OECD is not making all the world's literature available in any form. We know that people who have access already are going to SciHub for content and they are going for books and I guess for premium versions of OECD also. I thought that I could send each segment of a free OECD publication to myself and then download but what a bore I now find that I cannot even do that. Scholars want to download (http://ciber-research.eu/download/20150923-Boldly_Beyond_Downloads.pdf ) and keep and if they can do that via SciHub nothing that OECD does will make a difference Anthony -----Original Message----- From: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2018 09:10:53 +0000 Rick, As I’m sure you’re aware, Open Editions and OECD have each developed freemium open access models that provide frictionless, check-out-free, access to the full text of our content to non-subscribers. Non-subscribers don’t need to register, they can simply turn up and read their fill - there are no embargoes and the read-only versions are facsimiles of the versions of record. In OECD’s case, non-subscriber (and subscribers) can share and embed our read-only files on social platforms and websites. Subscribers get access to premium versions of the content, basically, downloadable, actionable files, plus off-line support. Happily, both Open Editions and OECD are finding that our freemium business models are generating sufficient revenues to foot our bills, pay staff and fund investments - as well as serving a growing readership on a legal and legitimate basis. I would argue that our model, if adopted by other scholarly publishers, would make SciHub largely redundant. Besides being legal and legitimate, I believe freemium is the fastest route to making all science freely accessible to all in a financially sustainable manner. Toby Green OECD