Dear James,
Just a stupid question: did you contact the authors and asked them whether you 
could have a copy of the software?
While I agree that one cannot expect from authors/funding agencies to support 
any software forever, in my opinion they should provide the version described 
in the paper as is, either for a licence fee or free, so others can 
reproduce/check their results.

Best,
Herman



Von: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] Im Auftrag von Frank 
von Delft
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 13. Mai 2015 07:10
An: [email protected]
Betreff: Re: [ccp4bb] [RANT] Reject Papers describing non-open source software

Sounds rather extreme considering what's actually annoying you is you weren't 
told up-front that's it's not worth your time trying to install whatever you 
were installing.  You should be complaining to whomever misled you into wasting 
your week.

The other thing you seem to be railing against is the universe, for not 
magically funding all software developers in perpetuity.  That's one for the 
funding bodies... though to be fair, can they be expected to support every 
brain-fart that made it into code and hence a paper?

(You asked for a flame! :)
phx



On 12/05/2015 17:48, James Stroud wrote:

I hereby call on the broadest community of academics and researchers, including 
scientists, historians, economists, sociologists, psychologists, and whoever 
else has ever published a paper or read from the literature thereof, to reject 
any and all papers that describe new software that itself is not released under 
an open source model.



I further declare that this post is designed to ruffle feathers and incite 
incendiary conversation, to provoke all-caps and evoke multiple exclamation 
marks with interposed "1"s where anger prevents one from properly holding the 
shift key.



My rationale for this post: I have just spent a week installing software for 
structural biology (not crystallography) only to find that some of the key 
utilities needed were described in a recent publication but were not OSS. The 
authors have decided to stop supporting the software but have not retracted 
their paper, which is completely irrelevant without the availability of the 
software package they describe.



Let's hammer this one out and come to the rational conclusion that non-OSS 
software should not be awarded publications.



James

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