On 28 March 2004 Brian Lynch wrote: > Stevan: > Dr. Baum has agreed that this editorial may be made available to the listserv > that you moderate. You may think it appropriate to bring the opinion of ACS > on open-access to the attention of listmembers. > > The Open-Access Myth > http://pubs.acs.org/email/cen/html/032804112410.html > From Chemical & Engineering News http://www.cen-online.org > A service of the American Chemical Society.
This is a comment on the article above, which has been made openly available Rudy M. Baum (Editor-in-Chief <http://pubs.acs.org/cen/staff/biorb.html>), The Open-Access Myth (Editorial), in: Chemical and Engineering News, Volume 82, Nr 08, February 23, 2004 Making this editorial freely available is laudable, since it is an interesting contribution to the open access debate. The reaction to this editorial by Nobel laureate Roald Hoffman is not, however, seen by the publishers of C&CN as interesting enough a contribution, and therefore stays behind the subscription tollgate. Or is it just 'not yet' openly available? I hope so. (At the end of this message I'm appending an excerpt.) Unfortunately -- particularly for the authors -- the research papers published by the ACS are presumably not considered as similarly interesting to their respective scientific debates, as the editorial is to the open access debate, and therefore not worthy of bringing out in the open to everyone who may have an interest. If not, why is mine the wrong conclusion to draw? Apart from this there are a few issues mentioned in the editorial that I would like to address. Quote from the editorial: "And it's not clear to me what advantage is conferred by shifting the cost of publishing from libraries to researchers." If that isn't clear, open access advocates have some more work to do. Let me have a go: by shifting the costs from libraries (read: institutions, via libraries and then via subscriptions, with their inherent access limitations) to 'researchers' (read: funders, often via institutes and libraries and then via article charges), the advantage (a huge one at that) can be open access for all, because access restrictions, needed for subscriptions, are not needed anymore in the 'input-paid' model. Isn't it wonderful? And no, the cost doesn't go up, either; certainly not the cost per article in the aggregate. How could it? Baum recognises the challenges to the STM publishers: "Prices charged by some commercial publishers are way too high." He seems to be implying that the more moderate subscription prices generally charged by non-profit publishers are the solution. He ignores, or rather denies, the endemic problem in the system: "...the marketplace is responding to those high prices in a predictable way as libraries make hard choices and cancel subscriptions." How has it been possible for any publishers to continue for so long to charge prices that are 'way too high' if there is a market mechanism at work? There is no market mechanism, or at the very best, a most inadequate one. Journals are monopoloid. Open access, with its article charge model, introduces a market mechanism. A final point. Open access with its 'input-charges' is a new publishing model. But is exploring "...an entirely new and unproven model..." anathema to science? I always thought that was its essence. Quelle naivete. Jan Velterop A few excerpts from Roald Hoffmann's letter: "[The editorial] is disappointlingly negative." "[It] loses faith before it starts out." "[It] lacks vision; to me it sounds like the automotive industry in its days of fighting catalytic converters." "Instead of fault-finding, I would recommend that we start with the ideal of open access: It's at the heart of what we do. And try to think of a way to make it work."