Thanks, Russ.  

 

Why, exactly, do we need them anyway.  Can't any list of a hundred experts
(like FRIAM, for instance) become a peer-review journal with everything
published to the web?  I have wondered about this before.  Let's say we
announce the FRIAM journal of Complexity Science and Scatology.  Now,
anybody can send us a paper 5 dollars and somebody will read it and assign
to it a number of stars, lets say between 0 and 5.  Now, when the author
receives the review, he may publish the paper with the assigned number of
stars, or he may revise the paper.  Readers of the "journal" can set number
of stars as a reading criterion.   We could have a second popularity index,
for people, not on the editorial board, express approval or disapproval for
an article.  

 

Some one of you is doing this already, right?  Who?  Where?  How's it
working.

 

Nick 

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Russ Abbott
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2012 10:14 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Self publishing

 

See this NYT article
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/14/science/researchers-boycott-elsevier-jour
nal-publisher.html>  and sign up here <http://thecostofknowledge.com/> .


 

-- Russ Abbott
_____________________________________________

  Professor, Computer Science
  California State University, Los Angeles

  Google voice: 747-999-5105

  Google+: https://plus.google.com/114865618166480775623/

  vita:   <http://sites.google.com/site/russabbott/>
http://sites.google.com/site/russabbott/
_____________________________________________ 





On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 8:39 PM, Nicholas Thompson
<[email protected]> wrote:

Hi, everybody, 

 

I have signed perhaps a dozen Publishers Agreements over my life time  and
each one was more onerous, self-serving, and stupid than the one before.  My
favorite was the publisher who asked me to "hold the Publisher harmless for
anything that might occur as a consequence of the publishing of the work."
I asked a lawyer if this meant I was liable if a printer got his hand caught
in the press while my book was running and he answered, "Well, probably
not."  And then he thought for a moment and said, "Oh, they'ld never come
after you for that!" Early contracts limited my liability to the income from
royalties, and one publisher actually provided authors' insurance for a
modest premium.  But no more.    

 

Well today, I got an author's contract for a paper I am contributed to an
academic collection that asked me to warrant that the work had been
commissioned by the publisher and was "work for hire".   Now,  work for hire
means that one's surrenders ALL rights to the work including the right to
claim it as one's own work.  It's the kind of contract you sign when you
write jacket copy for a publisher.  ( The publisher in this case was Oxford
University Press, in case any of you are thinking of doing business with
them.)  I am a wishy washy fellow, but somehow I could not sign a document
that said that my original work was "work for hire."  Couldn't do it. 

 

It's too late for this work.  I will have to sign the rights over to my
[young] collaborator, because she desperately needs the paper for her
career.  But MAN! It got me to thinking.  WHAT ABOUT self publishing.  With,
say, Amazon" Does anybody on the list have any experience with Amazon or
other self publishing services that they would like to share? 

 

My Dad was a book publisher, and I grew up with conversations around the
dinner table about "developing authors" and trying to find new authors, and
how a few books might have to be published before a new author caught on.
They published Churchill's Memoires and Mein Kampf (!) and the Peterson
Field Guides, among many others.   Now, it seems, publishers do very little,
and academic publishers, in particular,  do nothing but scavenge off the
fetid bits coughed up the publish or perish system. Is is it time to dump
them?   I am sure this is a party I am late to.  Where do I get invited.  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

http://www.cusf.org <http://www.cusf.org/> 

 

 


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

 

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to