I was CEO of ALPSP at the time, and the Association did indeed pay for the 
research - and it was (for us) a substantial outlay
 
Sally
 
 
Sally Morris
South House, The Street, Clapham, Worthing, West Sussex, UK  BN13 3UU
Tel:  +44 (0)1903 871286
Email:  sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk
 

  _____  

From: goal-boun...@eprints.org [mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org] On Behalf Of 
Ross Mounce
Sent: 09 October 2012 18:03
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Europe PubMed as a home for all RCUK research outputs?


'Pirate copies'... now there's an interesting topic for the list. 

I am a member of several social networking sites used by academics e.g. 
Facebook, Twitter, FriendFeed etc... and more traditional academic mailing 
lists (GOAL itself is one!) like TAXACOM (Taxonomy), DML (Dinosaur Mailing 
List), VRTPALEO  (Vertebrate Palaeontology) and more.

Such "PDF requests" for research material are a daily occurrence. I assume 
everyone on these sites and lists knows that it is technically copyright 
infringement if they supply a PDF to various requesters, but it seems to me 
that no researcher actually cares one bit about this. (my opinion/observation)

More importantly, the very ubiquity of these acts, the fact that very senior  
respected researchers in my field also do this, and that it's an everyday 
occurrence lead me to believe this practice is completely accepted by 
researchers (if not by subscription publishers) as just part and parcel of 
normal research in a 'serials crisis world' where no research library has 
access to everything.

So, I'm sorry but I fail to feel shamed. Requests for unrestricted access to 
information are completely normal in my community.

Point-taken though that this particular study is unlikely to have been publicly 
funded by taxpayers, and so it's a slightly different case to 'normal' publicly 
funded research works. 


Ross

PS Thanks for the suggestion David but I never use the Inter Library Loans 
system - it is very slow and supplies really awkward protected PDFs that can 
only be printed once (and our printer is very unreliable) from what I remember 
when I last attempted to use it years ago. Twitter is the new ILL from what I 
can see... [just making practical observations...]



On 9 October 2012 17:23, Sally Morris <sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk> wrote:



I don't see why ALPSP's ability to recoup the cost of  this research should be 
undermined by open distribution of pirate copies - shame on you!  However, I 
did summarise their findings, and combine them with other data, in a paper for 
the Publishing Research Consortium 
(http://www.publishingresearch.net/author_rights.htm)
 
Sally
 
 
Sally Morris
South House, The Street, Clapham, Worthing, West Sussex, UK  BN13 3UU
Tel:  +44 (0)1903 871286
Email:  sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk
 

  _____  


From: goal-boun...@eprints.org [mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org] On Behalf Of 
Ross Mounce

Sent: 09 October 2012 16:59 

To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)

Subject: [GOAL] Re: Europe PubMed as a home for all RCUK research outputs?


Thank you Sally. 

These are exactly the kind of evidence-based contributions we should be 
striving for in our discussions, in my opinion.

I found Cox & Cox 2008 here: 
http://test.alpsp.org/ngen_public/article.asp?id=200 
<http://test.alpsp.org/ngen_public/article.asp?id=200&did=47&aid=24781&st=&oaid=-1>
 &did=47&aid=24781&st=&oaid=-1

but regrettably it is only available for 'free' to ALPSP Members.

It would seem that I would have to pay £250/$480/€330 as a non-member to read 
this report!  If anyone could furnish me with a PDF copy I'd be much obliged.

Best,

Ross


On 9 October 2012 16:39, Sally Morris <sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk> wrote:



On one point - publishers' insistence on (c) transfer - there certainly are 
facts available.  The most recent study of which I am aware is Cox & Cox, 
Scholarly Publishing Practice 3 (2008).  They surveyed 400 publishers including 
most leading journal publishers, and received 203 usable responses.  According 
to further analysis by Laura Cox, 181 of these publishers represented 753,037 
articles (74.7% of ISI's world total for that year).
 
In their 2008 study, they found just over 50% of publishers asking for 
copyright transfer in the first instance (this had declined steadily from over 
80% in 2003 and over 60% in 2005);  of these, a further 20% would provide a 
'licence to publish' as an alternative if requested by the author.  At the same 
time, the number offering a licence in the first instance had grown to around 
20% by 2008.  So that's nearly 90%, by my reckoning, who either don't ask for 
(c) in the first place, or will provide a licence instead on request.
 
They also found that over 40% (by number of articles) made the finally 
published version open to text mining.  In addition, 80% or more allowed 
self-archiving to a personal or departmental website, 60% to an institutional 
website and over 40% to a subject repository (though authors often don't know 
that they are allowed to do this).  In most cases this applied to the submitted 
and/or accepted version; self-archiving of the final published version was much 
less likely to be permitted (though it appears to be what authors really want).
 
I understand ALPSP are currently repeating the study, so we may soon know if 
these trends have continued - I'd be amazed if they have not.
 
Sally
 
 
Sally Morris
South House, The Street, Clapham, Worthing, West Sussex, UK  BN13 3UU
Tel:  +44 (0)1903 871286 <tel:%2B44%20%280%291903%20871286> 
Email:  sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk
 

  _____  

From: goal-boun...@eprints.org [mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org] On Behalf Of 
Ross Mounce
Sent: 09 October 2012 15:51
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Cc: jisc-repositor...@jiscmail.ac.uk
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Europe PubMed as a home for all RCUK research outputs?


Dear Stevan,

I'm disappointed that you continue to make wild assertions without backing them 
up with good evidence. I, like many readers of this list (perhaps?) suggest 
you're not doing your credibility any favours here... 

A grating example:


Moreover, most fields don't need CC-BY (and certainly not as urgently as they 
need access).


[citation needed!!!]  

Who (aside from you) says that most fields "don't need CC-BY"?
You're the only person I know saying this.

*I* argue that we clearly would benefit greatly from CC-BY research as this 
explicitly enables content mining approaches such as textmining that may 
otherwise be impeded by less open licences. 

It has been estimated that over 50 million academic articles have been 
published (Jinha, 2010) and the volume of publications is increasing rapidly 
year on year. The only rational way we’ll be able to make full use of all this 
research both NOW and in the future, is if we are allowed to use machines to 
help us make sense of this vast and growing literature. I should add that it's 
not just scientific fields that would benefit from these approaches. Humanities 
research could greatly benefit too from techniques such as sentiment analysis 
of in-text citations across thousands of papers and other such analyses as 
applied to a whole variety of hypotheses to be tested. These techniques (and 
CC-BY) aren't a Panacea but they would have some strong benefits for a wide 
variety of research, if only people in those fields a) knew how to use those 
techniques and b) were allowed to use the techniques. (see McDonald & Kelly, 
2012 JISC report on 'The Value and Benefits of Text Mining' for more detail)

For an example of the kind of papers we *could* write if we actually used all 
the literature in this manner see Kell (2009) and its impressive reference list 
making use of 2469 previously published papers. CC-BY enables this kind of 
scope and ambition without the need for commercially provided information 
retrieval systems that are often of dubious data quality.



Repositories cannot attach CC-BY licenses because most publishers still insist 
on copyright transfer. (Global Green OA will put an end to this, but not if it 
waits for CC-BY first.) 


I agree with the first half of the sentence BUT the second half your assertion: 
 "most publishers still insist on copyright transfer" - where's the evidence 
for this? I want hard numbers. If there are ~25 or ~28 thousand active 
peer-reviewed journals (figures regularly touted, I won't vouch for their 
accuracy it'll do) and vastly fewer publishers of these, data can be sought to 
test this claim. For now I'm very unconvinced. I know of many many publishers 
that allow the author to retain copyright. It is unclear to me what the 
predominate system is with respect to this contra your assertion.

 
Finally:



Green mandates don't exclude Gold: they simply allow but do not require Gold, 
nor paying for Gold.


Likewise RCUK policy as I understand it does not exclude Green, nor paying for 
the associated costs of Green OA like institutional repositories, staff, repo 
development and maintenance costs. Gold is preferred but Green is allowed. Glad 
we've made that clear... 
 





Jinha, A. E. 2010. Article 50 million: an estimate of the number of scholarly 
articles in existence. Learned Publishing 23:258-263. 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1087/20100308

Kell, D. 2009. Iron behaving badly: inappropriate iron chelation as a major 
contributor to the aetiology of vascular and other progressive inflammatory and 
degenerative diseases. BMC Medical Genomics 2:2+. 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1755-8794-2-2

McDonald, D & Kelly, U 2012. The Value and Benefits of Text Mining. JISC Report 
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/reports/2012/value-and-benefits-of-text-mining.aspx





 
-- 
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-
Ross Mounce
PhD Student & Panton Fellow
Fossils, Phylogeny and Macroevolution Research Group
University of Bath, 4 South Building, Lab 1.07
http://about.me/rossmounce
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-


_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
GOAL@eprints.org
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal






-- 
-- 
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-
Ross Mounce
PhD Student & Open Knowledge Foundation Panton Fellow
Fossils, Phylogeny and Macroevolution Research Group
University of Bath, 4 South Building, Lab 1.07
http://about.me/rossmounce
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-


_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
GOAL@eprints.org
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal






-- 
-- 
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-
Ross Mounce
PhD Student & Panton Fellow
Fossils, Phylogeny and Macroevolution Research Group
University of Bath, 4 South Building, Lab 1.07
http://about.me/rossmounce
-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-

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