Yann LeCun <http://yann.lecun.com/ex/pamphlets/publishing-models.html> has
a promising idea. It's similar to yours, just more fleshed out.

*-- Russ *



On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 9:43 PM, Nicholas Thompson <
[email protected]> wrote:

> 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-journal-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****
>
>  ****
>
>  ****
>
>
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> ** **
>
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