On Mon, 2012-01-09 at 08:51 -0600, David L. McNeely wrote:
> ---- Jane Shevtsov <jane....@gmail.com> wrote: 
> > I just checked, and ESA charges nonsubscribers $20 for a single article
> > published in the December 2011 issue of Ecology. How is that reasonable?
> > And I'm no business maven, but isn't that far past the optimal price point
> > in terms of revenue generation? I could see paying $2 or $3 for an article
> > if I was an infrequent reader, but $20?
> > 
> > There's a good blog post on what alternatives publishers might support at <
> > http://researchremix.wordpress.com/2012/01/07/what-should-the-publishers-lobby-for/
> > >.
> 
> Is it really so difficult to get a paper?  I have never been unable to
> get a paper I wanted or needed, and I have never paid the high prices
> that publishers demand for instant access on the internet.  Most of us
> live within 50 miles of a library.  If the library does not subscribe
> to the journal in which the paper appears, interlibrary loan will get
> it for a reasonable cost.

I question the use of the word reasonable here. In the UK an
interlibrary loan for a single paper or part of a work costs me £12 -
for a photocopy!!! My university subsidises this so I must personally
pay £3.[*]

If the authors of the paper have paid ESA page charges to produce the
thing and subscribers to the journal have paid for the print copy, where
exactly does the $20 charged for the paper go, what does it pay for? The
website and mechanisms for storing and delivering the content
electronically, but that can't possibly cost $20.

There are ways round this and many scientists probably share PDFs of
papers they shouldn't but the point is that $20 for a stream of bits is
ridiculously expensive. Those lay people might not be that aware of the
other methods for getting papers and seeing the price they may be put
off trying to access the work. If that is work funded by the Government
it is shameful.

G

[*] things have improved markedly at UCL since I was a grad student
here, but only at huge cost to my institution through subscription
charges paid to the publishers. The situation is not sustainable and the
desperate pleadings of publishers is reminiscent of those from the music
industry when we all cottoned on to the fact that we really don't have
to pay what they charge for an MP3 or CD if we don't want to.

>   The real problem is the demand for instant gratification that we
> have developed.  It is that that we are being asked to pay for.
> 
> Should a paper cost $50?  I really don't know what it costs the journal to 
> produce the paper, what the demand is (well, for some papers the demand is 
> virtually nothing), or what distribution costs.  I do know that such services 
> as BioOne have greatly improved the bottom lines of some scholarly 
> organizations, which in the long run makes papers more available, not less. 
> 
> I guess in this one instance I am suggesting that free market is not so bad.  
> If you really must have the paper the instant you locate it through the free 
> search and free abstract mechanisms of the publishers, why then pay the 
> asking price.  Otherwise, use more traditional means of getting it.  If 
> publishers are getting the asking price, they will maintain it, or maybe ask 
> a little more.  If they are not getting it, they will back off.
> 
> If you are so far back in the sticks that you don't have ready access to a 
> library, investigate a bit.  I'll bet some library serves you if you find out 
> how.  If you are living in a cabin off the traveled roads and off the grid, 
> then you don't have internet access either, so your complaints about no open 
> access are moot.
> 
> David McNeely
> > 
> > Jane Shevtsov
> > 
> > On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 9:08 PM, M.S. Patterson 
> > <tertiarym...@gmail.com>wrote:
> > 
> > > Here's an additional opinion on the matter, and it is rather less
> > > charitable:
> > > http://phylogenomics.blogspot.**com/2012/01/yhgtbfkm-**
> > > ecological-society-of-america.**html?utm_source=feedburner&**
> > > utm_medium=twitter&utm_**campaign=Feed%3A+**TheTreeOfLife+%28The+Tree+of+*
> > > *Life%29<http://phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2012/01/yhgtbfkm-ecological-society-of-america.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheTreeOfLife+%28The+Tree+of+Life%29><
> > > http://phylogenomics.**blogspot.com/2012/01/yhgtbfkm-**
> > > ecological-society-of-america.**html?utm_source=feedburner&**
> > > utm_medium=twitter&utm_**campaign=Feed%3A+**TheTreeOfLife+%28The+Tree+of+*
> > > *Life%29<http://phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2012/01/yhgtbfkm-ecological-society-of-america.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheTreeOfLife+%28The+Tree+of+Life%29>
> > > >
> > >
> > > The fact that ESA forces authors to cede the copyright to their work is
> > > offensive, IMO, even if they 'grant' the author reprint or reproduction
> > > rights.  It also means that ESA could choose to rewrite their rules such
> > > that authors could lose rights to reprint or reproduce their own work.
> > >  Academic publishers should be granted first printing rights, with the
> > > option to acquire additional rights at a later date, as they desire.
> > >  Nothing more.  As it currently stands, ESA's policy is essentially
> > > treating research articles as work-made-for-hire, which is ludicrous, 
> > > given
> > > that authors must pay page charges to print the work!  In essence
> > > researchers are paying to have their work printed, while ceding all of
> > > their rights to the publisher in the process.
> > >
> > > Further, I don't think anyone is suggesting that ESA should be denied all
> > > subscription fees (or page fees), but simply that papers should become
> > > available publicly over time, and that any research funded by public 
> > > monies
> > > should be available to the public sooner rather than later.  Which is
> > > entirely reasonable, and more than likely beneficial to the public.
> > >
> > > -m
> > >
> > >
> > > On 1/5/2012 12:33 AM, Jane Shevtsov wrote:
> > >
> > >> Fellow Ecologgers,
> > >>
> > >> Have people read ESA's response to a proposed requirement that the 
> > >> results
> > >> of federally funded research be publicly available, possibly after an
> > >> embargo period? It's available here.
> > >> http://www.esa.org/pao/**policyStatements/Letters/**
> > >> ESAResponsetoPublicAccessRFI20**11.pdf<http://www.esa.org/pao/policyStatements/Letters/ESAResponsetoPublicAccessRFI2011.pdf>
> > >>
> > >> I have to say I find this response somewhat disappointing. While some of
> > >> the concerns raised in it are certainly valid, I believe it 
> > >> underestimates
> > >> ecologists' desire to read an interesting new paper now rather than 
> > >> later.
> > >> Also, kudos to ESA for allowing authors to freely post their papers
> > >> online,
> > >> something I relied on when I didn't have university journal access, but
> > >> how
> > >> is this financially different from open access? ESA's 2009 financial
> > >> statement (the latest available online) may be of interest.
> > >> http://www.esa.org/aboutesa/**docs/FS2009.pdf<http://www.esa.org/aboutesa/docs/FS2009.pdf>
> > >>
> > >> Thoughts?
> > >>
> > >> Jane Shevtsov
> > >>
> > >>
> > >
> > > --
> > > Matt Patterson
> > > MSES/MPA 2012
> > > Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs
> > > Center for the study of Institutions, Population and Environmental Change
> > > (CIPEC)
> > > Room 226A | 408 N Indiana Ave | Bloomington, IN 47408-3799
> > > Environmentally Scientific Emblogulations <http://env-sci-blog.blogspot.**
> > > com <http://env-sci-blog.blogspot.com>>
> > >
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > -- 
> > -------------
> > Jane Shevtsov
> > Ecology Ph.D. candidate, University of Georgia
> > co-founder, www.worldbeyondborders.org
> > 
> > "She has future plans and dreams at night.
> > They tell her life is hard; she says 'That's all right'."  --Faith Hill,
> > "Wild One"
> 
> --
> David McNeely
> 

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