Thank you for the numbers Claire and kudos to OASPA and its members - it is 
refreshing to see a strong open access publishing community. 

Critique

It is important for OA advocacy to understand that OASPA is an organization 
composed of publisher members who have their own business interests. The 
emphasis on open-access only journals and journal-wide CC licenses illustrates 
the problem. There are still journals publishing in print and/or print and 
online. The majority of the world's peer-reviewed journals have a history that 
predates Creative Commons licensing; for these journals, journal-wide CC 
licenses would be difficult or impossible to achieve. In some ways, OASPA acts 
as a lobby organization for born-digital, born-open-access journals. That's 
fine. Everyone has a right to represent their own interests. However, it is 
important for everyone, especially OASPA members, to understand that this is 
what OASPA is doing, at least some of the time.

My perspective is that the larger the corpus of CC-BY licensed works and the 
easier it is to identify them (e.g. if a robot can crawl the journals listed on 
DOAJ, search the metadata and retrieve all CC-BY items), the stronger the 
temptation is for the downstream commercial use actively invited by CC-BY 
licenses. CC, unlike OA, is not limited to works that are free-of-charge. 
Downstream services can be toll-access. For example, there is nothing in CC 
licenses that says that downstream users have to make their works reasonable 
available to those who made the original works possible. A downstream 
point-of-care health tool that draws from the CC-BY licensed works of medical 
researchers and funders in the developing world can be priced out of reach of 
the people in the developing world.

A bit more on IJPE:
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.ca/2015/05/growth-in-cc-by-numbers-and-critique.html

best,

Heather Morrison


On 2015-05-20, at 6:14 AM, Claire Redhead wrote:

> The latest post on the OASPA blog shows the growth of CC BY articles in open 
> access-only journals using data supplied by OASPA members up to the end of 
> 2014.  All of the figures are available for download which includes 
> information on other licenses and on open access articles published by OASPA 
> members in hybrid journals.
> 
> This year we are also pleased to be able to include data showing growth of 
> the Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB).
> 
> See http://oaspa.org/growth-of-oa-only-journals-using-a-cc-by-license/.
> 
> -- 
>  
> Claire Redhead
> Membership & Communications Manager
> Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association, OASPA
> http://oaspa.org/
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> GOAL mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal


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