Thank you to Graham Triggs for clarifying that his agreement that in the case 
of PLOS CC-BY licenses, PLOS is presumably the licensor is a  "personal opinion 
as a member of the public". 

PLOS authors retain copyright. CC licenses are a waiver of one's rights under 
copyright. This suggests that one of the following must be true:

-       PLOS authors, not PLOS, are the licensors of their works as copyright 
owners
-       PLOS is the licensor, and is legally entitled to do this because of a 
separate agreement between PLOS authors and PLOS (e.g. copyright transfer or 
author sub-licensing to PLOS)
-       PLOS is granting CC licenses where they do not have the required legal 
rights 

PLOS has been a vocal advocate of CC-BY, encouraging other publishers to use 
this license and decision-makers to require the license through policy, as well 
as an advocate of openness in science. I think it is reasonable to request that 
a PLOS spokesperson respond to this question on this public listserv. If 
someone can forward this question or provide me with the appropriate contact 
person at PLOS, that would be most appreciated. 

best,

-- 
Dr. Heather Morrison
Assistant Professor
École des sciences de l'information / School of Information Studies
University of Ottawa
http://www.sis.uottawa.ca/faculty/hmorrison.html
Sustaining the Knowledge Commons http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/
[email protected]



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