On Thu, 27 May 1999, D. R. Forsdyke wrote: > I agree entirely, that public-self archiving would solve many of > the problems referred to in the study. However, when copyright has > already been assigned to a publishing house (as a precondition of paper > journal publication), the publishing house may prefer to have its own > archive and refuse permission for self-archiving.
About copyright, see: http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/science.html and http://trauma-pages.com/harnad96.htm In brief, it is a foregone conclusion that authors who give their texts to their publishers gratis, asking no royalty or fee, will be able to retain their copyright as soon as they choose to assert their desire to do so. A limited license will be all they need to assign to their publishers. The American Physical Society, publishers of the most prestigious and highest impact journals in Physics have already set a clear model for all other learned-journal publishers in this regard. It is only a matter of time until all others follow suit. http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Hypermail/Author.Eprint.Archives/0006.html The only question is about what active researchers, with finite lifetimes, eager to maximize their scientific productivity and impact, ought to do in the meanwhile, and I think it is completely obvious to anyone who thinks about it (the logic of it, the justice of it, and the pragmatics of it) exactly what that is. The contributors to Los Alamos have already shown us all the way. > How many contributors to Cell, for example, know that now the > journal has been taken over by Elsevier, they will no longer be given > free permission to publicly self-archive (as was the previous policy of > Cell Press)? And again, it is entirely obvious what any Cell author who thinks about it ought to (and I hope will) do. Let Elsevier look at: http://xxx.lanl.gov/cgi-bin/show_monthly_submissions and weep! > This is unfortunate, since self-archiving allows the use of > colour, space and emphasis, which often is not possible in a paper > journal (and is too complex for the publishing house electronic > archivists to carry out). The work can then be much easier to > assimilate, even if downloaded to a paper version. Noch nie da gewesen, as we say in Latin. There are much stronger a fortiori reasons for self-archiving, far over and above these "add-on" arguments: There is no reason whatsoever why toll-gates should bar access to what we have given away for free solely in order to reach the eyes and minds of all of our potentially interested fellow-researchers the world over. We report our (often publicly funded) research findings, not to make money from the sales receipts, but to contribute to learned inquiry, so that others can build upon our work. In the paper era, the only way this PUBLICation of our findings was possible was via a medium whose native expenses required fees to be collected at the gate, for all the world as if it were the trade press of books and magazines, written for fees and royalties. That era is now over for this special literature, and it is entirely up to us when we elect to reap the scientific benefits of that fact. The Net and XXX have led us to the water: It is now up to us to drink. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Stevan Harnad [email protected] Professor of Cognitive Science [email protected] Department of Electronics and phone: +44 1703 592-582 Computer Science fax: +44 1703 592-865 University of Southampton http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/ Highfield, Southampton http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/ SO17 1BJ UNITED KINGDOM ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/
