I agree with you, Stuart.

You know, the first part of your proposal is what many researchers 
do: they publish papers under restrictive licences, but reports, 
data sets used for researching and even PhD dissertation are 
published under a free licence.

And let me explain other strategy for getting open research: it's 
asking governaments to obly by law to publish under free licence 
the work funded by them or made by public univs. This is something 
WikiMedia Chapter could work on.

In this sense some countries are taking some steps. For example, 
Spanish Gobernament has recently approved a law so every 
researcher funded by them has to publish the results of his work 
in an open directory. More info in Spanish [1].

Best,
Manuel

[1] 
http://oaulpgc.wordpress.com/2011/05/16/aprobada-la-ley-de-la-ciencia/

> From: R.Stuart Geiger <[email protected]>
> Date: 2011/6/13
> Subject: [Wiki-research-l] Closed-sourced papers on open source 
> communities
> To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities <
> [email protected]>
> 
> 
> Greetings wikiresearchers,
> 
> As many of you know (and as we've discussed on this list before), 
> the
> copyright licensing of academic papers about communities like
> Wikipedia is a huge issue.  I've just written up a blog post 
> about
> this, but the tl;dr is that I have a bit of a solution, be it a
> partial one.  The gist is basically that asking academics to 
> release
> *papers* under a free license is the wrong strategy.  Instead, we
> should encourage academics to release *research* under a free 
> license,
> and that this can be done in such a way that still makes it 
> complies
> with most of the contradictory obligations we have found 
> ourselves in.
> 
> It is quite possible to document a research project, its 
> motivations,
> its methods, its background, its findings, and even all those 
> charts
> and graphs on Meta, using the new Research: namespace and
> corresponding templates that were *just* launched -- which 
> everyone
> should check out anyway.  And while I'd love some legal 
> non-advice on
> this, I think we can do this in such a way that whenever it comes 
> time
> to assign copyright to the ACM, all of the CC-BY/CC-BY-SA 
> licensed
> graphs can be "used with permission" in a published research 
> paper.
> Anyways, the link is below, and I'd love to get some feedback on 
> it:
> http://www.stuartgeiger.com/wordpress/random-thoughts/2011/06/12/closed-source-papers-on-open-source-communities-a-problem-and-a-partial-solution/
> 
> Thanks!
> Stuart Geiger
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Wiki-research-l mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l
> 



--
Manuel Palomo Duarte
Software Process Improvement and Formal Methods group (SPI&FM).
Libre Software and Open Knowledge Office (OSLUCA).
Department of Computer Languages and Systems.
Escuela Superior de Ingenieria.
C/ Chile, 1
11002 - Cadiz (Spain)
University of Cadiz
http://neptuno.uca.es/~mpalomo
Tlf: (+34) 956 015483
Mobile phone: (+34) 649 280080
Mobile phone from University network: 45483
Fax: (+34) 956 015139

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