Hi all,

A question elsewhere about doai.io reminded me of this, and that
no-one ever replied. So, a reply :-)

It would certainly be nice to support green OA (which, historically,
we've not always paid very much attention to...).

I think *switching* to replace dx.doi.org might be a bad idea. For
example, it's a hassle for anyone who does have access and wishes to
see the original copy rather than a MS version. Before switching, we'd
also need a better understanding of how often it updates/confirms
archived copies are still available, or whether the original has
become accessible (consider a PNAS paper; they have a moving wall, so
in the first six months you'd want a self-archived copy, and after
that would prefer the journal.)

But we can still use it.

Some options:

a) We display a second "free copy, if available" link after the DOI,
for all DOIs, trusting that it will fail safely - it probably will;
see, eg, http://doai.io/10.1093/femsle/fnw043

b) We process our list of DOIs which exist on-wiki, look them up
through doai.io & dx.doi.org, flag all the ones where the two differ;
then add a "free copy available" link to these citations in
particular. Run every few months as needed.

The first raises false optimism; the second might involve a lot of
update editing. But they're workable.

Thoughts?

A.

On 28 February 2016 at 14:36, Federico Leva (Nemo) <[email protected]> wrote:
> Should our wikis use it? http://doai.io/
>
> Nemo
>
> _______________________________________________
> OpenAccess mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/openaccess



-- 
- Andrew Gray
  [email protected]

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