Here is an insight from the other side of access: Trying to restrict even a 
more user friendly document distribution policy of the Swiss ETH library, one 
of the largest Swiss libraries, by Elsevier, Springer and Thieme. One of the 
main argument has been that access to the plaintifs article is now normally 
going through Google directly to them, and that there is no need for the ETH to 
distribute copies of their articles. No word of repositories and open access as 
an alternative model and that these are what is much more user friendly.

This is a very strong argument for self or institutional archives.

Following is  a summary of the case.


In today's court case 
(https://plus.google.com/115599971535973973155/posts/cRDkskrfAo4) Elsevier, 
Springer and Thieme vs ETHZ-library both parties choose two different 
strategies. The lawyer of the plaintiff's made the case that the dissemination 
policy is against Swiss law, but very much undermines the private sector by 
competing unfairly by copying and distributing works that are freely available 
on the market. It was an argument that was biased the effect of the law, rather 
than building a case based on whether the law is properly applied or not. The 
also made the case, that Switzerland should essentially law from other 
countries that would not allow this practice.

The defense on the other hand argued from a legal point of view, citing law and 
decisions by the federal court, which is difficult to follow as non lawyer.

Probably the most remarkable point by the plaintiffs was, that they argued that 
every normal student would today use Google to find the paper and then directly 
go to the publishers service and get the paper. With other words, the service 
of the library is not needed anymore. Furthermore, they build their case on the 
statement, that the article is the work, and that they can be bought 
individually. They also made a statement, that his is a very robust and 
successful business model, and used the case of L'Oréal (the company) who buys 
100,000 articles from these publishers.

The plaintiffs also made a point that the authors do want to have healthy 
publishers because they need them for a successful career only the publishers 
can provide with their journals with high impact factors.

Also, they often used  comparison from the audio industry, essentially arguing 
that iTunes is the solution to access to music, since it is one complete 
service which would not need any more small shops selling CDs. Another argument 
has been made that copyright is important because of the income by selling 
later editions, like happening in novels.

The defense argued from the point of view that the publishers sell access to 
journals, and that copying parts of (articles) is allowed under current Swiss 
law. In fact, the issue is, that the publishers do not even sell individual 
journals to the library but entire bundles of journals.

The defense also made the point, that despite the plaintiffs might have a 
working system for access, they only cover their own content, which is far less 
than what a normal library can offer.
...........
Besides the legal argument that I cannot comment, the plaintiffs were drawing 
an image of the publishing industry that was well in favor of the students, not 
mentioning that an average prize for an article is around USD30 or more, does 
not sell journal articles but rather bundles of journals, that they essentially 
provide a service that does not need those of a library anymore, may be with 
the help of Google that helps to discover the source of the (plaintiffs) 
journals.

It is also interesting to compare the argument here with a somewhat related 
argument, whereby the plaintiffs make the case that the loss of their business 
has to be stopped by the law. Similarly, the ongoing discussion in science 
about what is work in the legal sense is in most cases an argument to apply 
copyright law so that attribution of guaranteed (which has nothing to do with 
copyright law proper).

 https://plus.google.com/115599971535973973155/posts/3PLhnUs12LU

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