Great idea, Stuart. This is definitely a great, albeit partial, solution!

I'll take it a couple steps further: First, in information systems 
publications--I don't know about other fields--it is quite common to borrow and 
adapt tables, not just figures, from other sources. As far as I understand 
(someone should please correct me if I'm mistaken), this is done under fair 
use/fair dealing laws. As long as the figures or tables copied or modified are 
just one small part of the article from which they are taken, copyright 
infringement has never been an issue. I've certainly copied third-party figures 
in this way (with appropriate citation, of course), and the journal's editorial 
office never mentioned a word about it.

Your solution makes this case even stronger: if the journals have no issue with 
borrowing third-parties' articles or tables under fair use/fair dealing laws, I 
couldn't imagine they would have an issue with using our own relicensed work.

My second extension: Extending this principle to tables should fill in the gap 
for qualitative research, which you mentioned in your blog as a possible 
limitation. You are right that most qualitative research might not be so 
meaningfully captured in graphs (though there are numerous creative 
exceptions); however, qualitative articles can effectually summarize the entire 
substance of their arguments and findings in well-written textual tables. I'm 
hoping that the rejuvenated AcaWiki (according to the thread from a couple 
months past) could provide a CC publication outlet for such tables, in the same 
spirit as Wikimedia Commons serving for graphs.

~ Chitu
Regards,

-----------------------
Chitu Okoli
Associate Professor in Management Information Systems
John Molson School of Business
Concordia University, Montréal

Phone: +1 (514) 848-2424 x2985
http://chitu.okoli.org/pro

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

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