The library community has to make up its own mind whether it is OA's friend or 
foe.

And this is exactly the kind of rhetoric that gives certain sectors/members of 
the OA community a bad name. The problem isn't OA; the problem is the 
unwillingness to deal with OA as something other than revealed religion. This 
kind of talk may help us come up with an Enemies List, but it doesn't actually 
help us solve any problems — unless, of course, you've decided up front that 
the only solution to every scholcomm problem is OA.

I suspect, however, that there might be a portion of the library community that 
would be strongly opposed to cancelling journals because they are Green, and 
precisely for the reasons I have mentioned.

That was never in doubt, Stevan. The "library community" is not a monolith. 
Different libraries have different policies and practices. Publishers are not 
stupid — they don't think that just because one librarian says "I'm more likely 
to cancel a Green-without-embargoes journal than a toll-access one, all other 
things being equal" that every library is going to do the same thing.

---
Rick Anderson
Assoc. Dean for Scholarly Resources & Collections
Marriott Library, University of Utah
Desk: (801) 587-9989
Cell: (801) 721-1687
[email protected]
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