UK Plans To Make All Government-Funded Research Free To The Public Immediately Upon Publication
from the groundbreaking dept
We've discussed the fight in the US over open access to government-funded research in the past. Currently, the NIH requires any NIH-funded paper to be publicly & freely available one-year after it's been published. That gives journals one-year of exclusivity to profit off of the work before it's more widely available. There have been some efforts to block government agencies from requiring such open access, as well as proposals to expand it to other agencies beyond the NIH. We also recently wrote about a proposal in New York to do something similar, but with six-month of exclusivity, rather than a year.Of course, some people take offense to any such exclusivity, seeing as we're still talking about taxpayer-funded research. Over in the UK, it appears that they're going to go completely in favor of open access, with a plan requiring immediate free access to any taxpayer-funded research. That's big news.
Unfortunately, not all of the details sounds as good. The proposal tries to make the journals okay with this by forcing researchers to pay an "article processing charge" for each paper they publish, and it sounds like some of those funds go back to the publishers. But, of course, that's putting more of the cost on the universities that fund the research, and there's reasonable fear that this will lead those universities to ration out how many publications are "allowed." Many open access advocates preferred a different plan, that still involved academics doing deals with journals, but which also allowed them to publish the works online. The publishers, of course, weren't happy with that plan.
More open access is definitely a good thing, but I worry about any sort of plan that involves an explicit attempt to prop up a legacy industry that doesn't want to adapt. That seems very likely to create economic waste and to be abused at the cost of the public.
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Filed Under: government research, nih, open access, uk
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Gov: "How about we make them pay you if we are paying them? Maybe we will throw in some kind of accreditation bureau, you can staff that with your retirees."
Pubs: "So you just give us taxpayer money but through researchers so it looks like we do something?"
White-collar welfare! To big to work! Why innovate, you retire in 10 years and this worked when you were 30?
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A Step in the Right Direction
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The only things the journals bring to the table are than the ability to print and bind them (redundant since most people just look at the original paper on-line now), host the files, being associated with the name of the journal (pretty much the only thing that counts) and charge huge fees to view or even sometimes to submit.
No, I have no idea how this makes sense either.
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Indeed. The problem, as ever, is that the economic waste is filling the pockets of the legacy industry, allowing them to bribe politicians to make sure they still get a disproportionate say in getting laws passed. To a politician the problem is, "If I don't make sure these guys still make money, then they won't have as much money to give to me!"
Our system is bullshit.
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This is actually an intelligent move - publicly-funded research gets the chance of public eyeballs.
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Anything planned for 2014 I'd expect to see arrive at sometime around 2017, where it will arrive with horror stories of its cost.
I'd much prefer to see some previously closed libraries reopened with that kind of money.
What's the point in making information so available if half the population can't read terribly well or understand what's being said?
On face value it is a good thing, but in the current economic climate, it does rather feel like we're repainting the living room whilst ignoring the subsidence in the kitchen.
I'm confused how it's the people doing the research which have to pay, that seems quite backwards. Surely if anyone has to pay the people who want the information should be paying (small amounts) to see what they want. I feel I've misunderstood what's been written, but I've read it 3 times now and come to the same baffling conclusion.
The Guardian doesn't pay me to read their paper every day and M&S don't pay me to wear their knickers.
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Winning combo!
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And I do agree that it seems to make more sense to have people pay to see what they want to read, but costs are currently ridiculous. I came across an article while searching for info for my master thesis this week where you had to pay $25(!) for access for ONE STINKING DAY. If the journals were the least bit reasonable I don't think there would even be an open access debate.
I do think that articles should be free after a while though, articles over 20 years old are either basic things you should just be able to read or outdated stuff which is only interesting because it's part of the history of a field, you shouldn't have to pay for things like that.
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FTFY.
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Imagine a 100 articles all written in different fonts, in different formats, with whatever style the author makes up for tables and charts that they created in Excel, or Publisher, or Powerpoint, or Word, or whatever other software they like to use. It's a mess.
Rather than being gatekeepers, publishers bring uniformity, making the information easier to read and understand, and curation of the most noteworthy and relevant information. It's not as simple as dumping your data online.
The question is what is that worth to the science community?
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