On Tue, Dec 10, 2013 at 11:44 AM, Armbruster, Chris <chris.armbrus...@eui.eu
> wrote:

 Same inkling as Jan & Laurent.  The way fwd for OAP would be some form of
> accreditation by repository & publisher. One would need to show what review
> & quality assurance mechanism is used, e.g. Pre- Post- Open peer review and
> demonstrate annually to the accreditation agency that this is what you are
> doing. The rest can be left to authors, readers and reviewers...
>

Ah me! Are we going to go yet another round of this irrelevant loop?
http://j.mp/OAnotPReform

The purpose of OA (it's not "OAP", it's OA) is to make peer-reviewed
research freely accessible online to all of its potential users, webwide,
not just to subscribers -- by freeing peer-reviewed research from access
tolls, not by freeing it from peer review (nor by first reforming and
"reassigning" peer review).

Haven't we already waited long enough?

Stevan Harnad


-------- Ursprüngliche Nachricht --------
Von: Laurent Romary
Datum:10.12.2013 17:31 (GMT+01:00)
An: "Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)"
Betreff: [GOAL] Re: Pre-publication peer review (was: Jeffrey Beall
Needlessly Compromises Credibility of Beall's List)

Each further day of thinking makes me feel closer and closer to this view.
As an author, I just like when colleagues are happy with one of my texts
online. As a reviewer I am fed up with unreadable junk.
Let us burn together, Jan.
Laurent



 Le 10 déc. 2013 à 15:36, Jan Velterop <velte...@gmail.com> a écrit :

 Sally,

 May I join you in the ranks of those who risk being pilloried or branded
heretics? I think the solution is clear. We should get rid of
pre-publication peer review (PPPR) and publish results in open
repositories. PPPR is the one thing that keeps the whole publishing system
standing, and expensive – in monetary terms, but also in terms of effort
expended. It may have some benefits, but we pay very dearly for those.
Where are the non-peer-reviewed articles that have caused damage? They may
have to public understanding, of course (there's a lot of rubbish on the
internet), but to scientific understanding? On the other hand, I can point
to peer-reviewed articles that clearly have done damage, particularly to
public understanding. Take the Wakefield MMR paper. Had it just been
published without peer-review, the damage would likely have been no greater
than that of any other drivel on the internet. Its peer-reviewed status,
however, gave it far more credibility than it deserved. There are more
examples.

 My assertion: pre-publication peer review is dangerous since it is too
easily used as an excuse to absolve scientists – and science journalists –
from applying sufficient professional skepticism and critical appraisal.

 Doing away with PPPR will do little damage – if any at all – to science,
but removes most barriers to open access and saves the scientific community
a hell of a lot of money.

 The 'heavy lifting is that of cultural change' (crediting William Gunn for
that phrase), so I won't hold my breath.

 Jan Velterop

 On 10 Dec 2013, at 13:36, Sally Morris <sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk>
wrote:

  At the risk (nay, certainty) of being pilloried by OA conformists, let me
say that – whatever ithe failings of his article – I thank Jeffrey Beall
for raising some fundamental questions which are rarely, if ever, addressed.

I would put them under two general headings:

1)         What is the objective of OA?

I originally understood the objective to be to make scholarly research
articles, in some form, accessible to all those who needed to read
them.   Subsequent
refinements such as 'immediately', 'published version' and 'free to reuse'
may have acquired quasi-religious status, but are surely secondary to this
main objective.

However, two other, financial, objectives (linked to each other, but not to
the above) have gained increasing prominence.  The first is the alleged
cost saving (or at least cost shifting).  The second - more malicious, and
originally (but no longer) denied by OA's main proponents - is the
undermining of publishers' businesses.  If this were to work, we may be
sure the effects would not be choosy about 'nice' or 'nasty' publishers.

2)         Why hasn't OA been widely adopted by now?

If – as we have been repetitively assured over many years – OA is
self-evidently the right thing for scholars to do, why have so few of them
done so voluntarily?  As Jeffrey Beall points out, it seems very curious
that scholars have to be forced, by mandates, to adopt a model which is
supposedly preferable to the existing one.

Could it be that the monotonous rantings of the few and the tiresome
debates about the fine detail are actually confusing scholars, and may even
be putting them off?  Just asking ;-)

I don't disagree that the subscription model is not going to be able to
address the problems we face in making the growing volume of research
available to those who need it;  but I'm not convinced that OA (whether
Green, Gold or any combination) will either.  I think the solution, if
there is one, still eludes us.


Merry Christmas!

Sally

Sally Morris
South House, The Street, Clapham, Worthing, West Sussex, UK  BN13 3UU
Tel:  +44 (0)1903 871286
Email:  sa...@morris-assocs.demon.co.uk


 ------------------------------
*From:* goal-boun...@eprints.org
[mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org<goal-boun...@eprints.org>]
*On Behalf Of *David Prosser
*Sent:* 09 December 2013 22:10
*To:* Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
*Subject:* [GOAL] Re: Jeffrey Beall Needlessly Compromises Credibility
ofBeall's List

 'Lackeys'? This is going beyond parody.

 David



 On 9 Dec 2013, at 21:45, Beall, Jeffrey wrote:

  Wouter,
  Hello, yes, I wrote the article, I stand by it, and I take responsibility
for it.
  I would ask Prof. Harnad to clarify one thing in his email below, namely
this statement, "OA is all an anti-capitlist plot."
  This statement's appearance in quotation marks makes it look like I wrote
it in the article. The fact is that this statement does not appear in the
article, and I have never written such a statement.
  Prof. Harnad and his lackeys are responding just as my article predicts.
  Jeffrey Beall
   *From:* goal-boun...@eprints.org
[mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org<goal-boun...@eprints.org>
] *On Behalf Of *Gerritsma, Wouter
*Sent:* Monday, December 09, 2013 2:14 PM
*To:* Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
*Subject:* [GOAL] Re: Jeffrey Beall Needlessly Compromises Credibility of
Beall's List
   Dear all.
  Has this article really been written by Jeffrey Beall?
 He has been victim of a smear campaign before!
  I don’t see he has claimed this article on his blog
http://scholarlyoa.com/ or his tweet stream @Jeffrey_Beall (which actually
functions as his RSS feed).
  I really like to hear from the man himself on his own turf.
  Wouter

  *From:* goal-boun...@eprints.org
[mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org<goal-boun...@eprints.org>
] *On Behalf Of *Stevan Harnad
*Sent:* maandag 9 december 2013 16:04
*To:* Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
*Subject:* [GOAL] Jeffrey Beall Needlessly Compromises Credibility of
Beall's List
   Beall, Jeffrey (2013) The Open-Access Movement is Not Really about Open
Access <http://triplec.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/525/514>. TripleC
Communication, Capitalism & Critique Journal. 11(2): 589-597
http://triplec.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/525/514
    This wacky article is going to be fun to review. I still think Jeff
Beall is doing something useful with his naming and shaming of junk OA
journals, but I now realize that he is driven by some sort of fanciful
conspiracy theory! "OA is all an anti-capitlist plot." (Even on a quick
skim it is evident that Jeff's article is rife with half-truths, errors and
downright nonsense. Pity. It will diminish the credibility of his valid
exposés, but maybe this is a good thing, if the judgment and motivation
behind Beall's list is as kooky as this article! But alas it will now also
give the genuine "predatory" junk-journals some specious arguments for
discrediting Jeff's work altogether. Of course it will also give the
publishing lobby some good sound-bites, but they use them at their peril,
because of all the other nonsense in which they are nested!)
    Before I do a critique later today), I want to post some tidbits to set
the stage:

 *JB: **"ABSTRACT: While the open-access (OA) movement purports to be about
making scholarly content open-access, its true motives are much different.
The OA movement is an anti-corporatist movement that wants to deny the
freedom of the press to companies it disagrees with. The movement is also
actively imposing onerous mandates on researchers, mandates that restrict
individual freedom. To boost the open-access movement, its leaders
sacrifice the academic futures of young scholars and those from developing
countries, pressuring them to publish in lower-quality open-access
journals.  The open-access movement has fostered the creation of numerous
predatory publishers and standalone journals, increasing the amount of
research misconduct in scholarly publications and the amount of
pseudo-science that is published as if it were authentic science."*
   *JB: **"[F]rom their high-salaried comfortable positions…OA advocates...
demand that for-profit, scholarly journal publishers not be involved in
scholarly publishing and devise ways (such as green open-access) to defeat
and eliminate them...*
   *JB: **"OA advocates use specious arguments to lobby for mandates,
focusing only on the supposed economic benefits of open access and ignoring
the value additions provided by professional publishers. The arguments
imply that publishers are not really needed; all researchers need to do is
upload their work, an action that constitutes publishing, and that this act
results in a product that is somehow similar to the products that
professional publishers produce….  *
   *JB:  **"The open-access movement isn't really about open access.
Instead, it is about collectivizing production and denying the freedom of
the press from those who prefer the subscription model of scholarly
publishing. It is an anti-corporatist, oppressive and negative movement,
one that uses young researchers and researchers from developing countries
as pawns to artificially force the make-believe gold and green open-access
models to work. The movement relies on unnatural mandates that take free
choice away from individual researchers, mandates set and enforced by an
onerous cadre of Soros-funded European autocrats...*
   *JB: **"The open-access movement is a failed social movement and a false
messiah, but its promoters refuse to admit this. The emergence of numerous
predatory publishers – a product of the open-access movement – has poisoned
scholarly communication, fostering research misconduct and the publishing
of pseudo-science, but OA advocates refuse to recognize the growing
problem. By instituting a policy of exchanging funds between researchers
and publishers, the movement has fostered corruption on a grand scale.
Instead of arguing for openaccess, we must determine and settle on the best
model for the distribution of scholarly research, and it's clear that
neither green nor gold open-access is that model...*

   And then, my own personal favourites:

  *JB: **"Open access advocates think they know better than everyone else
and want to impose their policies on others. Thus, the open access movement
has the serious side-effect of taking away other's freedom from them. We
observe this tendency in institutional mandates.  Harnad (2013) goes so far
as to propose [an]…Orwellian system of mandates… documented [in a] table of
mandate strength, with the most restrictive pegged at level 12, with the
designation "immediate deposit + performance evaluation (no waiver
option)". This Orwellian system of mandates is documented in Table 1...  *
   *JB: **"A social movement that needs mandates to work is doomed to fail.
A social movement that uses mandates is abusive and tantamount to academic
slavery. Researchers need more freedom in their decisions not less. How can
we expect and demand academic freedom from our universities when we impose
oppressive mandates upon ourselves?..."*

    Stay tuned!…
    *Stevan Harnad*
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 Laurent Romary
INRIA & HUB-IDSL
laurent.rom...@inria.fr





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