Elsevier is still the world's largest scholarly publisher and Elsevier authors 
still do have self-archiving rights. There is a very large corpus of works 
already published that authors could be making open access through their 
institutional repositories. 

Elsevier became the largest publisher in part by acquiring other smaller 
publishers. It is possible that Elsevier does not have author agreements for 
all of the previously published works. When I inquired about an article I 
published with another publisher in the 90's since taken over by Elsevier, 
Elsevier confirmed that they did not have a copy of the author agreement. This 
may not be unusual. I wonder if the complexity of answering such questions is 
one of the reasons Elsevier has tended to support broad-based author 
self-archiving rights. 

Regardless of how the OA community views Elsevier and its recent self-archiving 
policy change, researchers continue to publish in Elsevier journals. Some 
researchers have funding to pay to make these articles open access (Elsevier 
style), but many do not. The only way works published with Elsevier that are 
not supported for OA APCs will become OA is the authors self-archive.

Re Elsevier style open access - when authors are paying for the OA option, 
according to the Elsevier copyright website under Open Access Articles, 
"Authors sign an exclusive license agreement, where authors have copyright but 
license exclusive rights in their article to the publisher**...in this case 
authors have the right to: Share their article in the same ways permitted to 
third parties..."
from: http://www.elsevier.com/about/policies/author-agreement

In other words, when Elsevier publishes a CC-BY license, the copyright is in 
the name of the author, however the author has in effect signed away all rights 
to Elsevier. Elsevier is the exclusive Licensor. There is nothing in any of the 
CC licenses that obligates a Licensor to make the works they license available 
for free, and there is nothing in any of the CC licenses requiring a Licensor 
to continue to make a work available under the terms of first publication. 
Unless authors have and retain language clearly indicating terms that would 
obligate Elsevier to provide works for OA, Elsevier could change the way they 
distribute these articles at will. I am noticing that a number of journals and 
publishers listed in DOAJ require copyright transfer agreements, so this isn't 
just Elsevier. 

Creative Commons has overlap with open access, but the two are not the same. 
Superficially, the CC-BY license appears to be the legal embodiment of the 
spirit of the BOAI definition of open access. However, there are important 
differences. OA is about works that are free-of-charge. CC licenses can be used 
with works that are free-of-charge or works that are toll-access. 

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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