Saturday, May 27. 2006Plugging the Loopholes in the Proposed FRPAA, RCUK and EU Self-Archiving MandatesPre-emptively avoiding loopholes and pitfalls is indeed the optimal strategy. And it is precisely for that reason that instead of recommending that you emulate exactly the proposals of the FRPAA, the RCUK, or the European Commission, which all still have some needless weaknesses as well as loopholes, I recommend that you change two of their parameters to make your own policy recommendation the optimal one: The two changes are small but absolutely crucial: (1) Mandate immediate deposit for all accepted papers (rather than mandating deposit only after an interval determined by the publishers, or after a fixed 6-month embargo).This separate Dual Deposit/Release (DD/R) policy requires that the full text and metadata be deposited immediately, not after a delay; and it requires that the metadata (only) be immediately set to Open Access, so they are visible and accessible worldwide immediately upon deposit; but it allows the option of not setting access to the full-text itself as OA immediately. In effect, it thereby transfers the force of any embargo/delay onto OA access-setting instead of onto the deposit itself, which (to repeat) must be immediate. The US is probably the only country in the world that has enough collective weight to go even further, because it represents such a large proportion of the authorship of so many journals, and of the funding of so much published research: The US can, I think, with impunity put a cap (of six months, or even less) on the maximal allowable embargo period. The Wellcome Trust has already done this, telling their authors: "If your publisher does not agree to a cap of 6 months on the embargo, choose another publisher!" Wellcome, however, has the advantage, for this admirable and bold move, that they are a private funder. So all an author can do, if he does not like the Wellcome's terms, is to choose another funder. But the US Federal funding agencies are governmental, so they can be lobbied, not only by publishers but also by researchers and their institutions, if they object to the terms: And researchers may well object to being told that they cannot publish in the journal of their choice if it does not agree to a 6-month embargo cap! But the Dual Deposit/Release (DD/R) mandate removes even this possible obstacle to the adoption of the policy; for it does not require either switching publishers or contravening the terms of their copyright agreement. It allows embargoed access-setting but mandates immediate deposit (and then semi-automatic email-eprint requests in the repository software will take care of any gap-period in which the metadata are visible and accessible but the full-text is Closed Access). I think this slight parametric change answers your remaining concerns. That's 93% of journals, not publishers (as some publishers publish more journals than others). I have reached the figure on the basis of each journal's own official author self-archiving policy, as indexed, by journal as well as by policy, in the Romeo directory, for over 9000 journals, including all the principal ones.ANON: "In the case of FRPAA 2006, one has to be dependent on the mercy of the journal publishers, presuming that 93% of them will immediately allow the researcher to deposit his research in OA. Please let us know how you have reached that figure." But note that the Dual Deposit/Release (DD/R) policy would be immune to publisher objections and policies even if 100% of journals had had an embargo, because it does not mandate Open Access! It simply mandates immediate repository deposit, which is an internal record-keeping matter, and that is in no way the business of publishers or anyone else. What gives the Dual Deposit/Release (DD/R) policy its power is that (a) it also mandates the immediate deposit of the bibliographic metadata (author, title, journal name, date, etc.), which no one can embargo, and (b) the webwide, uniform visibility and accessibility of the metadata immediately makes the existence of the article visible as well, and allows each individual would-be user who finds that the article is Closed Access to use the semi-automatic eprint-request button we have designed for the GNU Eprints Institutional Repositories (since implemented for the Dspace repository software as well, and easily implementable by all other repository softwares) to request that the author email him the full-text. So whereas the dual mandatory-immediate-deposit plus optional-delayed-release policy does not mandate OA per se, it instead -- in exchange for immunity from all possible objections on the grounds of either copyright or author choice of journal -- requires immediate deposit in all cases, no exceptions or delays, and relies on (trivial) technology to fill any access-needs during any embargo-gap. (It is unlikely, by the way, that once the Dual Deposit/Release mandate is widely adopted, embargoes will survive for very long -- and in the meanwhile, all usage needs will be filled by the software technology, using the unique capabilities of the new medium). If the adoption of the proposed mandates instead keeps being delayed and delayed, as it has been now for the past 3 years, for the very reasons you are here raising, everywhere (except the Wellcome Trust plus the six institutions that have already mandated self-archiving) -- and even if the mandates are adopted as delayed deposit mandates (as the Wellcome policy is, with a cap of 6 months on the permissible delay) -- the result will be that embargoes will only become more deeply entrenched instead of being defused, as they are by the mandatory-immediate-deposit plus optional-delayed-release policy, which fixes both the date of deposit and the practise of depositing for all authors and papers uniformly and optimally, allowing no exceptions. It may be useful for you to bear in mind -- and also to inform your policy advisees -- that the real thing that has been holding back 100% OA for a dozen years now has not been copyright policy but keystrokes: Authors have not been depositing their articles in their institutional (or central) repositories. Two international, cross-disciplinary surveys for JISC by Key Perspectives have shown that most authors don't and won't self-archive spontaneously, but 95% of them will do see if/when mandated to do so by their funders and/or their institutions. And the actual experience of the (few) institutions that have already gone ahead and mandated self-archiving confirms the predictions of these JISC surveys. The self-archiving mandate should be thought of as a mandate to perform those all-important keystrokes -- for record-keeping as well as metadata-exposing purposes -- immediately upon acceptance for publication, which is the natural date, the date when usage of the research can and should begin, and the date that provides a fixed, objective landmark for all papers. (Swan et al. have written an excellent strategic analysis of the question of institutional versus central repositories: There is also excellent further policy guidance here [1] and [2] ) Once a "Keystroke Mandate" becomes widely implemented, 100% OA will not be far behind; but keep delaying the keystrokes because of other worries, or over-reaching, and you only keep delaying 100% OA. The timing of the deposit is now independent of any publisher embargo periods, which instead apply only to the timing of the Open Access-setting for the (Closed Access) full text. The policy need make no mention of embargo periods, except to recommend setting access OA immediately or as soon as possible. Not the law I have just described! It is completely unaffected. Please also see also the self-archiving FAQ on this very question.ANON: "Nevertheless, a public law can not be dependent on the assumptions, if this 93% of publishers tomorrow decide not to allow researchers to deposit in OA, the law is then helpless." What is needed right now is not a law that guarantees 100% OA; what is needed is a mandate that guarantees 100% immediate deposit of the full-texts and 100% immediate visibility of the metadata. Nature will take care of the rest.ANON: "In summary, there is a difficulty in constructing a law that guarantees 100% of OA even if the researcher/research-institute is willing to do so." But delaying and delaying the adoption of the policy (or weakening it to ineffectuality by allowing fixed or open-ended deposit-delays in order to comply with every possible embargo) is a way of guaranteeing that 100% OA will remain a long, long way off! The obstacle is keystrokes, and what is needed is a keystroke mandate, i.e., an immediate-deposit mandate, for internal record-keeping and external visibility purposes only. That is not an "OA law" but a law specifying conditions on the fulfilment conditions for receiving public funding for research: The resulting publications must be immediately deposited in an OAI Repository and must immediately make their metadata visible. Once that law is in place, 100% OA will quickly ensue of its own accord. But keep delaying the law by agonising instead over what will allow immediate OA for the full text in all cases -- or what interval can be agreed upon for delayed deposit -- and 100% OA will be delayed for yet another needless decade, You are quite right that immediate deposit, immediate access to the metadata, plus the email-eprint feature is not OA! But (1) it is almost OA, (2) it will rapidly usher in OA, and (3) it is infinitely more useful to research and researchers, now -- and for the very reasons that OA is so important and needed -- than continuing to delay and agonise over legislation that will somehow manage to formally accommodate publisher copyright agreements, and lobbies, and author choice, all at once, and in advance.ANON: "Moreover, the semi-automatic email is not open access as the term is being used in the legal texts or definition of OA. It depends on the will of the author/publishers et al and access is platform/ technology depended. A legislation has to be platform/ technology neutral/ independent." However, it is not true at all that the Dual Deposit/Release "keystroke" mandate depends on the will of the publishers, nor that access is platform/technology dependent. All of OA, and indeed the definition of OA, is dependent on some technology (the Internet and the Web) and in particular, on the OAI protocol for metadata-harvesting and interoperability. Hence all Open Access Repositories are OAI-compliant. That's easy, free, and all that's needed. And the mandate is platform-neutral too: It just requires immediate deposit of the full-text and immediate webwide visibility of the metadata. The rest will take care of itself. As to dependence on the author's will: All authors of all 2.5 million annual articles in the world's 24,000 peer-reviewed journals want to have as many users and citers of their research as they possibly can. That is why, in paper days, they would take the time, trouble and expense to mail paper reprints to individual reprint requesters. With the DD/R mandate, this is all reduced to one author keystroke, upon receiving the semi-automated eprint-request generated by the repository software. The only thing now standing in the way of that option today is the other N-1 keystrokes needed to deposit the full-text and the metadata into the repository. And that is what the DD/R "keystroke" mandate is for! Researchers never sought royalty revenue for their articles, and they never sought to deny access. Mandate the requisite N-1 keystrokes and they will do the Nth one happily for each individual eprint request (and to re-set access from Closed Access to Open Access when the embargo expires or they tire of doing the individual keystrokes -- whichever comes first!). No. A law based on conditions of funding (whether funding of research grants or funding of research or academic institutions) can have no power over what it does not fund. But it need not. The effects of a self-archiving mandate on funded research will propagate to non-funded research rapidly as the beneficial effects of Open Access on research accessibility, impact and progress are increasingly felt across the entire world research community.ANON: "In some cases, especially in social sciences, researchers build their papers on their research experiences from various sources, not necessarily with that of current research funding. So, can government law bind them in a strict legal sense to make their publications OA?" Right now, to repeat: the only thing holding us back from the feeling of those beneficial effects, and from their propagation across disciplines and around the world, is keystrokes -- not copyright: keystrokes. Hence an immediate-keystroke mandate is all that is needed. The (proposed) law does not tell the fundee where to publish. (It is already required that funded findings be published ["publish or perish"]). The discipline and research community dictates where to publish (in the highest quality peer-reviewed journal whose content and quality standards it successfully meets). The DD/R mandate would add only that the fundee must deposit the publication (if it is an article rather than a book) in an OAI-compliant repository (preferably his own institutional IR) immediately upon acceptance for publication. You are not talking above merely about depositing but about OA-depositing (i.e., depositing and setting access to the full-text immediately to OA rather than CA). So if thus making the full-text freely available online would violate the copyright agreement with the publisher, the only thing the FRPAA can do, if it wishes to mandate immediate OA-deposit, is to require the fundee not to sign such an agreement (as the Wellcome Trust requires, for agreements with embargoes exceeding 6 months).ANON: "If the journal publisher allows... the researcher to deposit the paper in [immediate] OA it is fine; otherwise the researcher is in danger of violating the copyright law of illegally distributing, reproducing, copying, extracting copyright material over the internet." But such a requirement would in turn be open to the author/institutions objection that it constrains the author's free choice as to where to publish. So the solution is to require deposit only (not OA-deposit), and merely to encourage OA-access setting whenever and as soon as possible. There is no other current solution: only the endless pre-emptive debating about what the publisher would/should/could require and what the author would/should/could do -- in other words, the effective pre-emptive "embargo" on the very adoption of a self-archiving mandate that we have been stalled in now for three years! Continuing that debate simply invites more years of lobbying, delay, and accumulating access/impact loss. What is needed is an immediate keystroke mandate, immune to debate or delay. (Then continue the debate while the keystroke mandate is having its natural effect.) This ground has already been covered, over and over, many times before, in the past three years. There is no resolution, only inaction. It is time for action, and the Keystroke Mandate is the requisite action. No, a (lawyer-dictated) inventory of provisos and exceptions will only make the mandate, confused, confusing and ineffectual: Immediate deposit of full text and metadata. No exceptions. No delays. And as access-setting is not at issue, publishers, hence author journal-choice, are both out of the loop.ANON: "So the solution to this problem cannot be within the technological systems of OA, [e.g., the email-eprint button of the IR software], but the OA Act would have to make exceptions for such cases. The FRPAA does not mention such exceptions - hence it needs to be rectified from this pitfall. A legal expert would be able to throw some light on it, I believe." Words stand in our way: The purpose of a Keystroke Mandate is of course Open Access. But call it an "Open Access Mandate" instead and you are up against the inventory of provisos and exceptions (that will in any case not add up to 100% OA). It is the tail wagging the dog. Mandate the immediate keystrokes, now, and then go back to debating the provisos and exceptions. Nor has technology anything to do with it, other than the online medium itself, that new medium on which the very concept and possibility of OA are predicated (Open Online Access). Read the opening words of the BOAI statement: "An old tradition and a new technology have converged to make possible an unprecedented public good: OAI-compliance is highly desirable, and easily feasible too, but need not be mentioned in any law, if you think it will produce a paralysing technology-dependence debate. Same for the trivial eprint-request button, implemented in both of the major free softwares for OAI IR creation (Eprints and Dspace)... Just mandate the immediate keystrokes and nature will take care of all the rest... Stevan Harnad American Scientist Open Access Forum Monday, May 8. 2006Strengthening the US Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA)
As presently drafted, the wording of the the timely and extremely welcome US Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA) stands to create needless problems for itself that could even make it fail under the already-gathering opposition from the publisher lobby.
Yet the FRPAA's flaws are ever so easily correctable: The gist of the problem is all there in this well-meaning quote by Senator John Cornyn (R, co-sponsor of the bill (with Senator Joe Lieberman, D: quotation is from Robin Peek's Newsbreak article in Information Today). JC: "Making this information available to the public will leadThis same logic underlies the Bill itself. The publisher lobby will (quite rightly) jump straight onto the two profound errors in this reasoning, and they will use it, for all its worth, against the Bill: (1) For most of the research literature, the public has neither the expertise nor the interest to read it.Yet the remedy is so absurdly simple: The pressing reason for making research accessible to everyone is not because the general public has a pressing interest in reading it, nor because the public's reading it will result in cures. It is so that researchers -- those specialists by and for whom it was written, the ones with the expertise to use, apply and build upon it -- can access and apply it, to the benefit of the general public who paid for it. In Senator Cornyn's quote, the following sentence comes second, and too late, already undone by the first statement (and the logic is similarly backwards in the Bill itself): JC: "This bill will give the American taxpayer a greater return on its research investment."The right way to put it is: "Making this information available to all researchers who can use, apply and build upon it will lead to faster discoveries, innovations and cures, thereby giving American taxpayers a greater return on their research investment. As a side bonus, the tax-paying public too will have access to as much as they may feel they wish to read of the research they have funded."Today, most of published research is not accessible to much of its potential research-user population because no researcher's institution can afford paid access to more than a fraction of it. That's the real public rationale for mandating self-archiving: so that the tax-paying public that funds the research can benefit from the "discoveries, innovations and cures" that will arise from making research findings accessible to all researchers who can use and apply them. UK: " Maximising the Return on the UK's Public Investment in Research"Of course, the general public can and will be able to read whatever they wish of research too, if it is made OA. But it is foolish in the extreme to base the case for making research OA on the putative pressing need for the public to read it, and the putative "discoveries, innovations and cures" that the reading public will provide as a result! Why would the FRPAA make such a silly strategic error? Because, superficially, the right of the tax-paying public to access the research that they have paid for looks like a spinnable "public good" issue as well as a spinnable "public right-to-know" issue. In that (flawed) form, it looks like viable political-campaign material. But what makes it look like such a compelling naive-voter issue is also its fatal weakness, once the publisher lobby -- which is not at all naive -- attacks it: because the two points I have made above are dead-obvious, and can stop the momentum of OA dead in its tracks if the FRPAA has no stronger rationale to back it up with. Here is what I would immediately say if I were in the publisher lobby (and believe me, the publishers are already busy saying it): "The government wants to put the revenues of a viable industry at possible risk simply because it thinks the general public has a burning need to read mostly-technical texts written for a small population of specialists. (Here we have some public-library data on the infinitesimal rate at which the general public actually consults this kind of specialized material when it is made freely available to them: Is this what all the fuss is about? Because if it's instead just about access to the kind of clinical-health-related material that we do have evidence the public wants to consult, we can easily work out a side-deal instead of the FRPAA that leaves most of the research literature in closed access, as it is now, with some exceptions for articles of potential clinical relevance and hence public interest).The requisite stronger rationale to counter these obvious (and valid) criticisms is precisely: research, from researchers, to researchers, for the sake of the research funder, the public -- along with the empirical evidence (from comparative usage and impact data for articles within the same journal issues that have and have not been made OA by their authors by self-archiving them) that the "small population of specialists who already have access to the research" is in reality only a fraction of its potential research usership. But the primary, solid and unassailable rationale -- the real rationale for OA all along: research for researchers -- needs to be put first, up-front, rather than trying to put the self-archiving mandate across under the banner of the weaker, defeasible rationale: "research for public use." [This could be supplemented by the case for the need for access to the primary research literature for students who are learning to become researchers (again not the general public).] Nothing at all is lost from remedying the FRPAA wording in this way. Public access still comes with the OA territory. But it immunizes the Bill, pre-emptively, against these obvious (and valid) prima facie publisher counter-arguments, whereas the current version is positively provoking them. In addition to this remediable flaw in the FPRAA's fundamental rationale for mandating self-archiving, there is also the functional flaw I mentioned in my previous posting on this topic (that of allowing any delay at all). This second flaw is also easily remedied (by what Peter Suber has come to call the "dual deposit/release policy") which is simply to mandate immediate deposit for all FRPAA-funded articles, and allow the 6-month delay only for the timing of the OA access-setting (Open Access vs. Closed Access), rather than for the timing of the deposit itself. That way, the new "Request Email Eprint" button -- now implemented in both the Eprints and Dspace Institutional Repositories and allowing individual users to request an email version directly from the author, semi-automatically -- will tide over any 6-month delay almost as effectively as immediate OA for all those would-be users who need it. Stevan Harnad American Scientist Open Access Forum Wednesday, May 3. 2006US Federal Research Public Access Act of 2006
The US Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA) has gone a long way toward correcting the fundamental flaws of the NIH Public Access Policy.
Let me count the ways: (1) FRPAA self-archiving is no longer requested but mandated.Cf: "Model Self-Archiving Policies for Research Funders" (Jan 2006) "DASER 2 IR Meeting and NIH Public Access Policy" (Dec 2005)And Peter Suber (see item 10 of his list of the top 10 OA stories) pinpoints the exact remedy for the FRPAA's sole remaining flaw (the fact that an embargo of up to 6 months is still allowed): The remedy is to mandate that all articles must be deposited immediately upon acceptance for publication: the only allowable delay, if any, can only be in the moment when access to the deposit is set to Open Access (not in the moment when it is deposited). This allows authors to use their IRs' new "email eprint" button to provide immediate email access for all would-be users during any delay period: Eprints version; Dspace version. Bravo to Senators Cornyn and Lieberman (and bravo also to Peter Suber, whose hand is clearly visible in the shape this policy has taken). Now, the FRPAA is just a Bill, not an implemented policy. There is still time for the RCUK as well as the European Commission to get their acts together and implement their immediate-deposit self-archiving policies before the US does: And of course nothing is stopping the worldwide network of universities and research institutions from adopting their own immediate-deposit mandates even before the big spenders do! "Generic Rationale and Model for University Open Access Self-Archiving Mandate" (Mar 2006) Stevan Harnad American Scientist Open Access Forum
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