Not Just Academics Fed Up With Elsevier: Entire Editorial Staff Resigns En Masse To Start Open Access Journal
from the good-for-them dept
It's really somewhat astounding just how absolutely hated journal publishing giant Elsevier has become in certain academic circles. The company seems to have perfected its role of being about as evil as possible in trying to lock up knowledge and making it expensive and difficult to access. A few years ago, we noted that a bunch of academics were banding together to boycott journals published by the company, as more and more people were looking at open access journals, allowing them to more freely share their research, rather than locking it up. Elsevier's response has been to basically crack down on efforts to share knowledge. The company has been known to charge for open access research -- sometimes even buying up journals and ignoring the open licenses on the works. The company has also been demanding professors takedown copies of their own research. Because how dare anyone actually benefit from knowledge without paying Elsevier its toll. And that's not even mentioning Elsevier's history of publishing fake journals as a way to help giant pharmaceutical companies pretend their treatments were effective.Basically on the list of companies which really are pushing to get themselves declared "evil," Elsevier has a prime spot.
And now even its employees are revolting. The editorial staff of an Elsevier journal have all resigned to go start an open access journal instead:
All six editors and all 31 editorial board members of Lingua, one of the top journals in linguistics, last week resigned to protest Elsevier's policies on pricing and its refusal to convert the journal to an open-access publication that would be free online. As soon as January, when the departing editors' noncompete contracts expire, they plan to start a new open-access journal to be called Glossa.One of the editors who quit notes that he'd "be better off going to flip burgers" in the time he spent working for the journal, rather than accepting the tiny amount Elsevier pays him.
The editors and editorial board members quit, they say, after telling Elsevier of the frustrations of libraries reporting that they could not afford to subscribe to the journal and in some cases couldn't even figure out what it would cost to subscribe. Prices quoted on the Elsevier website suggest that an academic library in the United States with a total student and faculty full-time equivalent number of around 10,000 would pay $2,211 for shared online access, and $1,966 for a print copy.
While this may seem like a specific kind of dispute focused in the academic world, what's incredible is it shows just how far copyright has moved from its original purpose and intent. The original copyright laws were officially focused on this kind of research. The US's first copyright law was specific that it was an act for "the encouragement of learning." And the use of "science" in the Constitutional copyright clause actually meant "learning" at the time it was written. Copyright was supposed to be about encouraging people to share information for educational/learning purposes.
And now it's being used for exactly the opposite. And in these cases it's certainly not (at all) about compensating content creators. Academic authors don't get paid for their research papers -- and in some areas they even have to pay to submit it to these journals. And companies like Elsevier get tons of free or cheap labor as well. Peer review is generally done for free. The article notes that the executive editor of the journal is paid only $5,000 per year. And yet the company wants to charge libraries thousands of dollars to access it?
It's a total scam.
And, worse, it's a scam where all of us are the victims. The sharing of knowledge and the ability to learn from others and to build on their works is a core aspect of how learning, science and education advance. And Elsevier has rejected all of that in favor of fat profits -- something it can only do because of our totally screwed up copyright laws. Having the editorial staff here resign is a really strong public message that hopefully people take notice of.
In the meantime, however, Elsevier should be Exhibit A in how copyright is abused to stifle learning which is completely opposed to its Constitutional purpose.
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Filed Under: copyright, education, glossa, journals, learning, lingua, literary journal, open access
Companies: elsevier
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Don't forget our totally screwed up academic system that means young academics have huge incentives to publish in "better" journals, which, often, forces elsevier
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academic publishing - a rotten system
There was a time when these journals were probably worth the high price. The cost of typesetting for a publication that had such few copies printed was obviously a major factor. But modern technology has greatly reduced that factor -- yet the prices went in the exact opposite direction.
The Internet was supposed to have greatly reduced the impact of companies that have firmly embedded themselves as a tolled gateway between buyers and sellers (or produsers and consumers) in which the only reason why anyone ever goes there ... is because everyone always goes there.
The academic publishing business is a mess, and the lack of any true competition keeps costs high. Much of this is due to the vanity of the authors, who want to be published in an 'elite' journal or publisher, and are willing to do whatever it takes to get there. Including basically working for free while someone else reaps enormous profits from their work.
It always confounded me that college professors got very little money (or so they claimed) out of the 3-figure price that their book cost students, a book that all students of the class were required to buy (and presumably no one outside of that class ever bought). It always seemed like it would have been so easy to simply cut out the middleman and everyone would have had more more in their pockets.
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Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
...which is why it has always needed to be regulated. It's interesting the stuff you find when you actually read what Adam Smith had to say on the subject. (The infamous "invisible hand of the market" that's often quoted to support a laissez-faire policy is completely out of context in such a debate.)
It's been said that all it takes to destroy a communist system is for one person in the system to fail. On a similar note, all it takes to destroy a capitalist system is for one company in the system to succeed.
Problematic, no?
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Copyright is needed as an incentive to create
After all, Elsevier has costs. Thieving pirates shouldn't expect Elsevier to build and maintain a troll gate for free do you?
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Re: Copyright is needed as an incentive to create
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Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
When government teams up with corporations its no longer a capitalist system.
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Re: Copyright is needed as an incentive to create
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Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
I could not agree with you more. The government is unmatched in regulating industry, they are terrible at running businesses. Health care, social welfare, retirement, you name it, they are terrible at it. Hand the businesses off to the people that are professional business managers, and let the legislators regulate them in accordance with the will of the people.
It would work too, if you could find an honest legislator... ha... hahaah... buwahhahahaha!!!
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Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
And FYI essential services should not be run for profit, but for the good of the people. Hospitals, etc., are not supposed to be businesses.
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Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
Depends. Some regulating bodies are fair to all, some not so fair. Regulations haven't stopped a few from operating without licenses or permits, and only a complaint from a competitor gets any action. Some regulators have legal authority to make unannounced visits to verify regulatory compliance, others don't. Pick any area and you'll find regulations that put everybody on an equal footing and other regulations that favor one over another. You'll also find regulations that are equally enforced while others not enforced at all, or selectively enforced.
TL;DR: while government may be "unmatched" in regulating, the enforcement isn't always equitable.
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That must have been a long time ago. When I was first exposed to the system in the mid-1980s, journals expected camera-ready copy. That was only starting to become easy for authors with roff, troff and later TeX. Less technically advanced schools and departments had to pay for their writings to be typeset and printed before submission.
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Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
No - it is not vanity - it is the mechanisms that are used to assess institutions* combined with a good helping of inertia.
* Actually it is the institutions perception of this mechanism that is the problem.
The documentation for latest research assessment in the UK specified explicitly that publication venue would not be used as a criterion - but some institutions still insist on publication in well known journals for staff that are entered into the exercise.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
"And FYI essential services should not be run for profit, but for the good of the people. Hospitals, etc., are not supposed to be businesses."
Who is to determine the good of the people? The politicians? You think that's working out for the U.K.? Austerity measures, death panels, cut's in social care due to lack of funding, waste and abuse, you name it, it's falling apart nice and slow, but it's falling apart.
I can post hundreds of links if you want, try typing in search terms like "U.K. death panels" "Austerity measures" "U.K. health care wait times".
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Response to: Anonymous Coward on Nov 5th, 2015 @ 8:19am
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Re: Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
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How about the people? Any particular reason you can't conceive of not being the whipped property of some aristocrat, or the possibility of an easy, fast way of firing your mommy/daddy BEFORE they take actions against your interests? Or are you an American who has no reason to live without some manufactured earthly incarnation of some ideal or deity and some problem to preserve and whinge about?
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I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be juged by the content of their work, but by the publishers whom accept their work.
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http://zapatopi.net/afdb/
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
"How about the people? Any particular reason you can't conceive of not being the whipped property of some aristocrat, or the possibility of an easy, fast way of firing your mommy/daddy BEFORE they take actions against your interests? Or are you an American who has no reason to live without some manufactured earthly incarnation of some ideal or deity and some problem to preserve and whinge about?"
It has nothing to do with any country, religion, or parenting. The reason is human nature. As a race we are consumers. We have never been happy with being equals. Every single society formed on this planet has had some type of class system. You have a handful that think that the Utopian society is possible, and have tried with the best of intentions, but it's never worked, never! You can't name one society comprised of humans that has stood the test of time, much less stood the test of time in such a selfless manor. The balance of power tips towards a lucky few, and it keeps tipping until it collapses. Governments, Dynasties, Tribes, Dictators.. if it's comprised of humans, it will eventually fail, and if there are any of us left, it will reform into something new.
You give the ability of the few to wield the power of the many and you will eventually achieve corruption. Then failure. You can however, prolong that failure. If the system is monetized, you can control it. If hospitals, social services, and retirement programs make money, they will compete for your business, offering you the best services (or write-offs in the case of charity), because they want your money. If you control that competition through regulation, you can prolong the failure by using human nature "greed", to keep the system afloat. But it too will fail eventually. There is no cure for corruption. It's part of being human.
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No, YOU are consumers. Take your neoliberal evangelism and pay someone to shove it up your consumer choice of orifice. Don't you EVER tell me what I am or am not, and especially don't EVER project your pathetic American psychoses onto me.
I know full well there's no cure for corruption. Yet such as you would have us keep the corruption to a "minumum" by making sure it all flows in the direction of you and your friends?
People generally try to do the right thing when they're not jammed into crowded cages and taught to gladiate for their supper. Look upon YOUR works, authoritarian nutjob, and despair. And don't look at me to convict the one who strings your boot-licking chump face up.
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I agree it's a stupid way to rank people. My post was to note that Elsevier's social function (as a Vetter Of Good Science) is one of the reasons its bizarre monopoly has persisted. Academics need to go after that culture as much as they need to do things like boycott publishing corporations. Fortunately, it's also already getting better, with open source software and other marks of academic work being considered as important contributions for things like tenure.
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Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
Well all of those things used to work really well over here until commercial interests lobbied the government into handing that sort of stuff off to professional business managers. Now it doesn't work quite so well for those who depend on it.
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Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Nov 5th, 2015 @ 8:19am
Yes because your constitution simply copied the preamble of the Staute of Anne - and that preamble was based on propaganda written by the London Company of Stationers.
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Using human nature to control the population has been going on for thousands of years. I didn't invent it, I'm just pointing it out. I'm not part of the 1%. I work 50 hours a week for a modest paycheck. I control the flow paperwork that comes across my desk, and that's about it.
I do enjoy reading about past societies and civilizations. If you take the time to study a few, even modern ones, you can start to see patterns of behavior. You can almost pinpoint the tipping point where they start to fail, and most of them fail for the same reason. Greed and corruption.
The mindset that we can have equal access to services, and those services should not be for profit, is not going to work. It's never worked, humans won't let it work. We will never be satisfied with being equals, it's not in our nature.
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Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
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SIGNIFICANT
Better looking too.
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Such as Elsevier editing Climate Change data to fit their denier beliefs?
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Re: Re: Re: academic publishing - a rotten system
It's still a capitalist system, just not a free market system.
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Re: Copyright is needed as an incentive to create
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I'm an author, not a "content creator". Those are the monkeys making tabloids.
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