1. First, congratulations to
Princeton University (my graduate alma mater!) for adopting an open access mandate: a copyright-reservation policy, adopted by unanimous faculty vote.
2. Princeton is following in the footsteps of
Harvard in adopting the copyright-reservation policy pioneered by Stuart Shieber and Peter Suber.
3. I hope that Princeton will now also follow in the footsteps of Harvard by adding an
immediate-deposit requirement with no waiver option to its copyright-reservation mandate, as Harvard has done.
4. The Princeton copyright-reservation policy, like the Harvard copyright-reservation policy, can be waived if the author wishes: This is to allow authors to retain the freedom to choose where to publish, even if the journal does not agree to the copyright-reservation.
5.
Adding an immediate-deposit clause, with no opt-out waiver option, retains all the properties and benefits of the copyright-reservation policy while ensuring that
all articles are nevertheless deposited in the institutional repository upon publication, with no exceptions:
Access to the deposited article can be embargoed, but deposit itself cannot; access is a copyright matter, deposit is not.
6. Depositing all articles upon publication, without exception, is crucial to reaching 100% open access with certainty, and as soon as possible; hence it is the
right example to set for the many other universities worldwide that are now contemplating emulating Harvard and Princeton by adopting open access policies of their own; copyright reservation alone, with opt-out, is not.
7. The reason it is imperative that the
deposit clause must be immediate and without a waiver option is that, without that, both
when and
whether articles are deposited at all is indeterminate: With the added deposit requirement the policy is a mandate; without it, it is just a gentleman/scholar's agreement.
[Footnote: Princeton's open access policy is also unusual in having been adopted before Princeton has created an
open access repository for its authors to deposit in: It might be a good idea to create the repository as soon as possible so Princeton authors can get into the habit of practising what they pledge from the outset...]
Stevan Harnad
EnablingOpenScholarship