Open Access Archivangelism
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10021Open Access: "Plan S" Needs to Drop "Option B"
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1205-Open-Access-Plan-S-Needs-to-Drop-Option-B.html
<a href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/commissioners/2014-2019/moedas/announcements/plan-s-and-coalition-s-accelerating-transition-full-and-immediate-open-access-scientific_en"><!-- s9ymdb:903 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="300" height="212" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/CoalitionS.png" alt="" /></a>To combine <a href="https://plus.google.com/u/0/+PeterSuber/posts/iGEFpdYY9dr">Peter Suber's</a> post with <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/13/scientific-publishing-rip-off-taxpayers-fund-research?CMP=share_btn_fb">George Monbiot</a>'s: The only true cost (and service) provided by peer-reviewed research journal publishers is the management and umpiring of peer review, and this costs an order of magnitude less than the publishers extortionate fees and profits today.<br />
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The researchers and peer-reviewers conduct and report the research as well as the peer reviewing for free (or rather, funded by their institutions and research grants, which are, in turn, funded mostly by tax-payers).<br />
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Peer-reviewed research journal publishers are making among the biggest profit margins on the planet through almost 100% pure parasitism.<br />
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Alexandra Elbakyan's <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sci-Hub">Sci-Hub</a> is one woman's noble attempt to fix this.<br />
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But the culprits for the prohibitive pay-walling are not just the publishers: They are also the researchers, their institutions and their research grant funders -- for not requiring all peer-reviewed research to be made Open Access (OA) immediately upon acceptance for publication through researcher self-archiving intheir own institutional open access repositories.<br />
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Instead the OA policy of the EC ("<a href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/commissioners/2014-2019/moedas/announcements/plan-s-and-coalition-s-accelerating-transition-full-and-immediate-open-access-scientific_en">Plan S</a>") and other institutional and funder OA policies worldwide are allowing publishers to continue their parasitism by offering researcher' the choice between Option A (self-archiving their published research) or Option B (paying to publish it in an OA journal where publishers simply name their price and the parasitism continues in another key).<br />
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Unlike Alexandra Elbakyan, researchers are freeing their very own research OA when they deposit it in their institutional OA repository.<br />
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Publishers try to stop them by demanding copyright, imposing OA embargoes, and threating individual researchers and their institutions with Alexandra-Elbakyan-style lawsuits.<br />
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Such lawsuits against researchers or their institutions would obviously cause huge public outrage globally -- an even better protection than hiding in Kazakhstan.<br />
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And many researchers are ignoring the embargoes and spontaneously self-archiving their published papers -- and have been doing it, inclreasingly for almost 30 years now (without a single lawsuit).<br />
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But spontaneous self-archiving is growing far too slowly: it requires systematic mandates from institutions and funders in order to break out of the paywalls.<br />
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The only thing that is and has been sustaining the paywalls on research has been publishers' lobbying of governments on funder OA policy and their manipulation of institutional OA policy with "Big Deals" on extortionate library licensing fees to ensure that OA policies always include Option B.<br />
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The solution is ever so simple: OA policies must drop Option B.
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Publishing Lobby, 2018-09-14T12:27:50Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=12050http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1205Selfie-evident nonsense about copyright
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1202-Selfie-evident-nonsense-about-copyright.html
<!-- s9ymdb:901 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="300" height="300" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 15px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/monkeyselfie.jpg" alt="" />Regardless of what one feels about photo copyright or about (nonhuman) animal (legal) personhood, the "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_selfie">monkey selfie</a>" trial is absurd. The trivial counterexamples abound:<br />
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1. If a photographer sets up a camera so the sun's rays automatically trigger a photo of the sun, is it the sun's copyright?<br />
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2. Is it different if the "sun's" photo is of a tree? or of a monkey?<br />
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3. Is it different if the photo is triggered by acoustic triggers from thunder? or from someone's footsteps?<br />
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4. Is it different if it's time-lapse photography triggered by touch from the growth of a plant?<br />
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5. What has "selfie" to do with it? Doesn't it apply to any remote-triggered image <em>by</em> anyone or anything, <em>of</em> anything or anyone?<br />
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6. If the monkey deliberately triggered a photo to get a food-pellet would that be different from deliberately triggering it for a look at the photo? of self? of other? of a tree? of a file-photo? of a mirror?<br />
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7. Does it make any difference if it's a monkey (who does not recognize self in mirror or photo) or an ape (who does)? or an infant?<br />
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8. Or monkeys typing Shakespeare?<br />
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Perhaps copywriting deliberate, repeated finger-paintings treated as personal property by apes makes more sense, but it's on a slippery slope to copywriting vomiting on a canvas...<br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Copyright, 2017-08-03T05:01:28Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=12020http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1202BOAI 2017: Access Opening, Budapest Closing
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1200-BOAI-2017-Access-Opening,-Budapest-Closing.html
<a href="https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/orban-hungary-mafia-state-by-balint-magyar-2017-06"><!-- s9ymdb:900 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="72" height="110" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/mafiastate.serendipityThumb.jpg" alt="" /></a><a href="https://library.ceu.edu/budapest-open-access-initiative-boai-15-years-later/"><!-- s9ymdb:899 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="110" height="63" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 15px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/BOAI15.serendipityThumb.jpg" alt="" /></a>Its ironic that billionaire George Soros (who is less wealthy than billionaire Bill Gates but has done a lot more philanthropy, both absolutely and proportionately) is today being notably <a href="https://www.facebook.com/anna.bayer.338/videos/10155503514384458/">vilified in a hate campaign</a> by Hungarys incipient dictator, Viktor Orban, who is expelling the <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/22/hungary-viktor-orban-george-soros">Central European University</a> (founded by Soros, and the best university in Hungary) while blaming its founder for Hungarys ills. (Meanwhile Orban is busy becoming a billionaire -- in Hungarian Forints stolen from EU funds and Hungarian tax-payers)<br />
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Soross <a href="https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org">Open Society Institute</a> was also the one that founded and funded the <a href="http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org">Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI)</a> that launched OA <a href="https://library.ceu.edu/budapest-open-access-initiative-boai-15-years-later/">15 years ago</a>. (But I suspect that yet another US billionaire will find a way to <a href="https://www.irishtimes.com/business/technology/trump-s-paradigm-shift-may-derail-free-access-to-online-content-for-researchers-1.3126744">trump</a> Orbans odia with his own...)<br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
News, 2017-07-10T12:55:08Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=12000http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1200Summary of Settlement Agreement Approved by Superior Court Judgment Friday, June 16, 2017
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1201-Summary-of-Settlement-Agreement-Approved-by-Superior-Court-Judgment-Friday,-June-16,-2017.html
<strong>FROM THE MONTRÉAL RODEO TO ALL QUÉBEC RODEOS</strong><br />
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Summary of Settlement Agreement Approved by Superior Court Judgment Friday, June 16, 2017<br />
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Montréal - June 16, 2017<br />
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1. On May 23, 2017, Professor Alain Roy of the Faculty of Law of the Université de Montréal, supported by a group of law students, presented to the Superior Court a Motion for an Interlocutory Injunction to cancel the rodeo planned for this August as part of Montréals 375th Anniversary Celebrations;<br />
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2. On June 7, 2017, the parties signed a Settlement Agreement which deals with the social concerns at issue involving rodeos across Québec and not only Montréals 375th Anniversary Celebrations;<br />
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3. Normally, settlement agreements remain confidential and are not made public. In this case, it was agreed that the Settlement Agreement would be made public and fully transparent to deal with the concerns of Quebec citizens. <br />
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4. On June 16, 2017, the Superior Court approved and certified the Settlement Agreement. This Agreement is now a COURT JUDGMENT;<br />
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5. Pursuant to this Judgment, the parties are now required to jointly request MAPAQ or the government ministry responsible for the application of the Animal Welfare and Safety Act (BÊSA) to establish an Advisory Committee by June 22, 2017 at the latest. This committee will consist of:<br />
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3 representatives (soon be to appointed by Professor Roy) from the animal rights field<br />
3 representatives from the rodeo industry<br />
2 representatives from MAPAQ.<br />
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6. The Judgment directs the parties to the Advisory Committee to identify the different standards of conduct for animal safety and welfare applicable to rodeo activities in the Province of Québec, TO EVALUATE THE SCOPE AND SUFFICIENCY OF SUCH STANDARDS WITH REGARD TO THE APPLICABLE LAWS (INCLUDING THE MATTER OF THE SPURS AND STRAPS USED IN BRONCO RIDING TRIALS), and to make the recommendations to MAPAQ that the Committee deems requisite for the safety and welfare of animal beings;<br />
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7. The judgment also directs the parties to comply with additional obligations that were not part of the Injunction. Two experts (a veterinarian and a behaviorist) in addition to a photographer will therefore be appointed by Professor Roy to attend both the Montréal (NomadFest 2017) and Ste-Tite (Ste-Tite 2017 Western Festival) rodeos to make their own findings concerning the well-being and the safety of the animals used in the rodeos. Each of the expert reports will be submitted to the Advisory Committee and will then be made public;<br />
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8. In accordance with the Judgment, the report must be filed and made public no later than one year after the Advisory Committees creation;<br />
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9. At the conclusion of the Advisory Committee's report, nothing precludes Professor Roy from filing a Motion for a Declaratory Judgment in Court in order to obtain a ruling on the legality of the rodeo practices identified by the Advisory Committee and evaluated by the two experts (see paragraph 8 above), in light of the provisions of the BÊSA Act;<br />
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10. In summary, on June 16, 2017, the Superior Court issued a public and fully accessible Judgment setting out the legal obligations of all parties and furthermore establishing legal deadlines. In the event that a party fails to comply with its obligations, the Judgment may be enforced in Court.<br />
<br />
SOURCE<br />
Droit animalier Québec - DAQ<br />
https://www.facebook.com/droitanimalierquebec/<br />
<br />
INFORMATION<br />
Me Michael Simkin<br />
msimkin@legallogik.com<br />
Phone: 438-478-3456<br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
News, 2017-06-16T21:00:00Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=12010http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1201Rationale for Requiring Immediate Deposit Upon Acceptance
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1199-Rationale-for-Requiring-Immediate-Deposit-Upon-Acceptance.html
<!-- s9ymdb:230 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="94" height="20" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/requestXbut.png" alt="" />There are multiple reasons for depositing the AAM (Author Accepted Manuscript) immediately upon acceptance:<blockquote>1. The date of acceptance is known. The date of publication is not. It is often long after acceptance, and often does not even correspond to the calendar date of the journal.<br />
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2. It is when research is refereed and accepted that it should be accessible to all potential users. <br />
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3. The delay between the date of acceptance and the date of publication can be anywhere from six months to a year or more.<br />
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3. Publishers are already trying to embargo OA for a year from date of publication. The gratuitous delay from acceptance could double that.<br />
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4. The date of acceptance is the natural date-stamp for deposit and the natural point in the authors work-flow for deposit.<br />
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5. The AAV at date of acceptance is the version with the least publisher restrictions on it: Many publishers endorse making the AAM OA immediately, but not the PV (Publishers Version).<br />
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6. Having deposited the AAM, the author can update it if and when they wish, to incorporate any copy-editing and corrections (including the PV).<br />
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7. If the author elects to embargo the deposit, the copy-request button is available to authorize the immediate automatic sending of individual copies on request. Authors can make the deposit OA when they choose. (They can also decline to send the AAM till the copy-edited version has been deposited but <em>most authors will not want to delay compliance with copy requests</em>: refereed AAMs that have not yet been copy-edited can be clearly marked as such.)<br />
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8. The acceptance letter provides the means of verifying timely compliance with the deposit mandate. It is the key to making the immediate-deposit policy timely, verifiable and effective. And it is the simplest and most natural way to integrate deposit into the authors year-long workflow.<br />
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9. The above timing and compliance considerations apply to all refereed research, including research published in Gold OA journals.<br />
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10. Of the 853 OA policies registered in ROARMAP <a href="http://roarmap.eprints.org/cgi/search/archive/advanced?screen=Search&dataset=archive&policymaker_name_merge=ALL&policymaker_name=&policy_adoption=&policy_effecive=&deposit_of_item=required&date_of_deposit=acceptance&mandate_content_types_merge=ANY&apc_fun_url_merge=ALL&apc_fun_url=&satisfyall=ALL&order=policymaker_name&_action_search=Search">96 of the 515 OA policies</a> that <em>require (rather than just request or recommend) deposit</em> have adopted the <em>immediate-deposit upon acceptance requirement</em>. </blockquote>Below are references to some articles that have spelled out the rationale and advantages of the immediate-deposit requirement.<blockquote>Stevan Vincent-Lamarre, Philippe, Boivin, Jade, Gargouri, Yassine, Larivière, Vincent and Harnad, Stevan (2016) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/370203/">Estimating Open Access Mandate Effectiveness: The MELIBEA Score</a>. <em>Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST)</em> 67(11) 2815-2828 <br />
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Swan, Alma; Gargouri, Yassine; Hunt, Megan; & Harnad, Stevan (2015) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/375854/">Open Access Policy: Numbers, Analysis, Effectiveness</a>. <em>Pasteur4OA Workpackage 3 Report</em>.<br />
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Harnad, Stevan (2015) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/361704">Open Access: What, Where, When, How and Why</a>. In: <em>Ethics, Science, Technology, and Engineering: An International Resource</em> eds. J. Britt Holbrook & Carl Mitcham, (2nd edition of Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, and Ethics, Farmington Hills MI: MacMillan Reference) <br />
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Harnad, Stevan (2015) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/381526/">Optimizing Open Access Policy</a>. <em>The Serials Librarian</em>, 69(2), 133-141 <br />
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Sale, A., Couture, M., Rodrigues, E., Carr, L. and Harnad, S. (2014) <a href="http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18511/">Open Access Mandates and the "Fair Dealing" Button</a>. In: <em>Dynamic Fair Dealing: Creating Canadian Culture Online</em> (Rosemary J. Coombe & Darren Wershler, Eds.) http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18511/<br />
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<strong><a href="https://www.google.ca/#safe=active&q=site:http://openaccess.eprints.org+immediate+deposit+acceptance+letter+date&*">Postings about the immediate-deposit requirement in Open Access Archivangelism</a></blockquote></strong>
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Self-Archiving Mandates, 2017-03-27T12:12:27Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11990http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1199FOA: Free Online Access
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1198-FOA-Free-Online-Access.html
Re: <a href="http://poynder.blogspot.ca/2017/02/copyright-immoveable-barrier-that-open.html">Copyright: the immoveable barrier that open access advocates underestimated</a> (Richard Poynder)<br />
<hr /><a href="http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/0820.html"><!-- s9ymdb:293 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="78" height="110" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/zeno.serendipityThumb.jpg" alt="" /></a>Lets simplify:<br />
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1. Stick to peer-reviewed research articles: thats all FOA is or was ever about.<br />
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2. Copyright and re-use rights are and always have been a red herring in the FOA age.<br />
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3. All thats needed is an FOA version of the peer-reviewed research article.<br />
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4. Thats the authors peer-reviewed final draft.<br />
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5. The only thing needed from journals (or equivalent) is the adjudication and certification of the peer review.<br />
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6. Thats a service, not a product: Nothing to copyright.<br />
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7. To make the current house of copywrit (sic) cards collapse, all authors need do is make 4 (the authors peer-reviewed final draft FOA (freely accessible online)<br />
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8. FOA immediately (upon acceptance) and permanently (<a href="http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/3224.html">FIPATRAFTO</a>).<br />
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9. For the faint-hearted and superstitious, theres the Copy-Request Button during any (bogus) publisher embargo on OA.<br />
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10. Like Copyright worries (2), Button worries are red herrings.<br />
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11. FOA is all thats needed or was ever needed.<br />
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12. Once researchers, their institutions and their funders get round to providing FOA (= <a href="http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/442-guid.html">Green, Gratis OA</a>), Fair Gold OA (peer-review service fees) and all the re-use rights researchers need will be within trivial reach.<br />
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(Waiting for researchers, their institutions and their funders to get their heads around this and to set their fingers in motion continues to be yawningly boring; please wake me when they get round to it...)<blockquote><hr /><strong><a href="http://poynder.blogspot.ca/2017/02/copyright-immoveable-barrier-that-open.html?showComment=1487841419262#c3530410826099533086">Charles Oppenheim</a>:</strong> <br />
Stevan is not quite correct. Copyright IS relevant because the authors foolishly agree to assign (or give an exclusive licence) it to the publisher. For Stevan's proposal to work, they must stop doing that. If a researcher has foolishly given away that right, Stevan's No 7 onwards in principle cannot work. So amend Stevan's 12 point plan by adding a final sentence to his point 6, "UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHOULD THE AUTHOR ASSIGN COPYRIGHT TO THE PUBLISHER, OR GRANT IT AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE TO THE WORK". Then his plan is legally watertight. I do agree with Stevan's final thoughts in brackets. I too am waiting.....<blockquote><strong><a href="http://poynder.blogspot.ca/2017/02/copyright-immoveable-barrier-that-open.html?showComment=1487879344480#c1132257178137408999">Stevan Harnad</a></strong>: Charless formal caveats are quite correct for pedants and poltroons. But think: if <a href="https://arxiv.org/stats/monthly_submissions">the physicists in 1991</a> (or the computer scientists even earlier) had had the slightest inclination to give such reservations a single moments credence instead of going ahead and doing exactly what they did (self-arxiving their preprints, and then their refereed final drafts, immediately, and not bothering with the publishers version of record), FOA would never have made even the modest strides it has made: <br />
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So lets stop fussing about copyright and start self-archiving all our refereed final drafts immediately upon acceptance for publication! Its 2017, almost 3 decades since good sense first erupted and prevailed in some intrepid subsets of the research community. Coraggio!<br />
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Apart from that (which should be done in any case), Charles is also right that it is foolish (and unnecessary) to assign copyright or grant an exclusive license to the publisher. The limited right to publish and sell the version of record, online and on paper, is more than right enough and as much reward as they deserve for their one and only value-added, which is the administration of the peer review (which the peers provide for free, just as the author provides the text for free).</blockquote></blockquote><br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Copyright, 2017-02-23T06:28:19Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11980http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1198Scholastic Interview
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1196-Scholastic-Interview.html
<!-- s9ymdb:801 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="300" height="238" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/greengold3.jpg" alt="" /><strong><a href="http://blog.scholasticahq.com/post/universal-green-oa-to-solve-serials-crisis-stevan-harnad/">Scholastica</a> Interview:<br />
</strong><br />
<strong>Youve long championed the Green OA movement. Why do you feel this model has the most promise, and what do you envision for a Green future? </strong><br />
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Green-first is the only approach to OA (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subversive_Proposal">1994</a>) that I have ever championed since long before the term OA was coined (<a href="http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read">2002</a>):<br />
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My approach is, and always has been:<br />
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1. All researchers self-archive all their peer-reviewed research (immediately upon acceptance for publication, or even earlier, in their own institutional repositories). Self-archiving (<a href="http://openaccess.eprints.org/%C2%A0http://www.arl.org/scomm/subversive/toc.html">1994</a>) came to be called <a href="http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read">BOAI-I (2002)</a> and then <a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/accessdebate/21.html">Green OA (2004)</a> (with OA journal publishing, formerly BOAI-II, dubbed Gold OA).<br />
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2. Once Green OA is universal, libraries can cancel subscriptions (because everything is available as Green OA), making subscriptions unsustainable, and forcing peer-reviewed journal publishers to cut obsolete products and services and their costs and downsize to their only remaining essential service: the management of peer review. There is no more print edition and all archiving and access-provision is offloaded onto the worldwide network of Green OA institutional repositories.<br />
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3. Journals then have to down-size to just peer review and its cost and convert to Gold OA for cost-recovery (this is what I now call Fair Gold OA) paid for by authors institutions out of a small fraction of their annual windfall subscription cancellation savings.<br />
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4. But Gold OA <em>before</em> universal Green-OA-induced downsizing is Fools Gold OA because it is unnecessary, arbitrarily inflated in price, double-paid (uncancellable institutional subscriptions for their input and Fools-Gold OA fees for their output) or even double-dipped (in the case of hybrid subscriptions/fools-gold journals) at a time when subscriptions alone are already unaffordable.<blockquote><small>Harnad, S. (1995) <a href=" http://www.arl.org/scomm/subversive/toc.html">Universal FTP Archives for Esoteric Science and Scholarship: A Subversive Proposal</a>. In: Ann Okerson & James O'Donnell (Eds.) <em>Scholarly Journals at the Crossroads; A Subversive Proposal for Electronic Publishing</em>. Washington, DC., Association of Research Libraries, June 1995.<br />
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Harnad, S., Brody, T., Vallieres, F., Carr, L., Hitchcock, S., Gingras, Y, Oppenheim, C., Stamerjohanns, H., & Hilf, E. (2004) <a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/accessdebate/21.html ">The Access/Impact Problem and the Green and Gold Roads to Open Access</a>. <em>Serials Review</em> 30. http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/10209/ Shorter version: The green and the gold roads to Open Access. <em>Nature Web Focus</em>. <br />
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Harnad, S. (2007) <a href="http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/13309/">The Green Road to Open Access: A Leveraged Transition</a>. In: Anna Gacs. <em>The Culture of Periodicals from the Perspective of the Electronic Age</em>. L'Harmattan. 99-106. <br />
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Harnad, S. (2010) <a href="http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/21348/">No-Fault Peer Review Charges: The Price of Selectivity Need Not Be Access Denied or Delayed</a>. <em>D-Lib Magazine</em> 16 (7/8). <br />
<br />
Harnad, S (2014) <a href="http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2014/04/28/inflated-subscriptions-unsustainable-harnad/">The only way to make inflated journal subscriptions unsustainable: Mandate Green Open Access</a>. <em>LSE Impact of Social Sciences Blog</em> 4/28 </small></blockquote>What has delayed this optimal, inevitable and obvious outcome is (1) researcher slowness in self-archiving, (2) institutional and funder slowness in implementing and monitoring Green OA self-archiving mandates and (3) Fools-Gold-Fever. Publishers have also tried to embargo Green OA but for this there is a solution, the institutional repositorys eprint-request Button for any embargoed deposits:<blockquote><small>Sale, A., Couture, M., Rodrigues, E., Carr, L. and Harnad, S. (2014) <a href="http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18511/">Open Access Mandates and the "Fair Dealing" Button</a>. In: <em>Dynamic Fair Dealing: Creating Canadian Culture Online</em> (Rosemary J. Coombe & Darren Wershler, Eds.) <br />
<br />
Harnad, Stevan (2015) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/361704/">Open Access: <em>What, Where, When, How and Why</a>. In: Ethics, Science, Technology, and Engineering: An International Resource</em> eds. J. Britt Holbrook & Carl Mitcham, (2nd edition of <em>Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, and Ethics</em>, Farmington Hills MI: MacMillan Reference) <br />
<br />
Harnad, Stevan (2015) <a href=" http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/381526/ ">Optimizing Open Access Policy</a>. <em>Serials Librarian</em>, 69(2), 133-141</small></blockquote> <br />
<hr /><br />
<strong>What do you think are the pros and cons of current Gold OA solutions such as using an APC or library subsidy model to fund publications? Do you think these models could become sustainable or do you think they are replacing current research funding struggles with new ones (e.g. instead of grappling with subscriptions libraries will now grapple with APCs)? </strong><br />
<br />
For pre-Green Fools-Gold OA, its all cons and no pros. The pros are for Green OA, and that can be provided free. <br />
<br />
Pre-Green Fools-Gold is enormously over-priced (because it still includes the products and services and their costs that universal Green OA makes obsolete), double-paid, double-dipped (in hybrid Fools Gold journal), unaffordable and unsustainable.<br />
<br />
In contrast, down-sized post-Green Fair-Gold (for peer review service only) is affordable and sustainable.<br />
<br />
<hr /><br />
<strong>Do you think control of research publication needs to be taken away from corporate publishers or do you think it is possible for them to work with the academic community? If the former, who do you think needs to take over research publication and dissemination - groups of academics running their own journals, societies or university presses taking back journals, library publishers etc. and why? </strong><br />
<br />
No, I think this is all nonsense and has been holding us up for decades. There is no way to take over and its unnecessary. Whats necessary is for all institutions and funders to mandate Green OA. That will force downsizing and conversion to Fair-Gold without the need for "take-overs" (except in the case of abandoned titles, which can then indeed be taken over by Fair-Gold OA publishers). <blockquote><small>Gargouri, Y., Hajjem, C., Lariviere, V., Gingras, Y., Brody, T., Carr, L. and Harnad, S. (2010) <a href="http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18493/">Self-Selected or Mandated, Open Access Increases Citation Impact for Higher Quality Research</a>. <em>PLOS ONE</em> 5 (10) e13636 <br />
<br />
Vincent-Lamarre, Philippe, Boivin, Jade, Gargouri, Yassine, Larivière, Vincent and Harnad, Stevan (2016) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/370203/">Estimating Open Access Mandate Effectiveness: The MELIBEA Score</a>. <em>Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST)</em> 67</small> </blockquote><hr /><br />
<strong>In the OA movement do you think there is a place for discussion about substantially lowering research access fees as opposed to trying to eliminate them entirely? Do you think this is something that is/should be considered more (e.g. iTunes model where articles are $2 instead of $40)? </strong><br />
<br />
This is the oldest and silliest approach of all:<a href="http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/0698.html"> the SPARC approach in the 1990s</a> (till they realized it doesnt work and switched to Green and Gold OA): try to collectively negotiate licenses to lower the price of subscriptions. It doesnt work, because journals are independent and will not downsize unless they are forced to. And only mandatory Green OA and cancellation can force them to do it. And no subscription price is a fair price because subscriptions are unnecessary and obsolete with universal Green OA<br />
<br />
It is taking the author/institution/funder/library community a ridiculously long time to learn that that their only path to universal OA is by first universally mandating Green. The outcome remains optimal and inevitable (and obvious) but I have tired of repeating myself, so I am no longer actively archivangelizing except when asked. <blockquote><small>Harnad, S. (1997). <a href="http://cogprints.org/1695/">How to fast-forward learned serials to the inevitable and the optimal for scholars and scientists</a>. <em>Serials Librarian</em>, 30(3-4), 73-81.<br />
<br />
Harnad, Stevan (2016) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/398024/">Open Access Archivangelist: The Last Interview?</a> <em>CEON Otwarta Nauka (Open Science)</em>, Summer Issue <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.infotoday.com/IT/oct04/poynder.shtml">http://www.infotoday.com/IT/oct04/poynder.shtml</a><br />
<br />
<a href="https://orbi.ulg.ac.be/homenews?id=112">https://orbi.ulg.ac.be/homenews?id=112</a></small></blockquote>
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Publishing Reform, 2017-02-10T22:36:29Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11960http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1196Entry Denied: Making America Great Again
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1195-Entry-Denied-Making-America-Great-Again.html
<!-- s9ymdb:898 --><img class="serendipity_image_center" width="700" height="467" style="border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/reugeeboy1.jpg" alt="" />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)2017-01-31T13:56:49Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11950http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1195OA: Did Researchers Triumph Or Get Trumped By Publishers?
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1194-OA-Did-Researchers-Triumph-Or-Get-Trumped-By-Publishers.html
<center>Re: "<a href="http://poynder.blogspot.co.uk/2017/01/the-nih-public-access-policy-triumph-of.html">The NIH Public Access Policy: A triumph of green open access?</a>" <br />
by Richard Poynder.<br />
<hr /></center><br />
<!-- s9ymdb:218 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="110" height="110" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/nihbig.serendipityThumb.gif" alt="" />OA advocates are a plurality, not a monolith. They do not agree that only CC-BY = OA. <br />
<br />
There are two "shades" of OA:<br />
<br />
"Gratis OA" = free access<br />
"Libre OA" = CC-BY<br />
<br />
The right measure of proportion OA for PMC (or any repository) is the percent that is Gratis <em>or</em> Libre OA, not just the percent that is CC-BY. (It also matter <em>when</em> it is deposited: immediately or a year or more after publication.)<br />
<br />
The PMC figures are insufficient. Percent OA in PMC does not even represent percent OA in biomedicine, in the US or globally, let alone in all fields. And PMC, as Richard notes, is largely publisher-deposited, which means it's For-Fee Fool's Gold OA rather than author-deposited For-Free Green OA.<br />
<br />
That the percentage OA is growing globally with time is inevitable, as the old researchers are retiring with time, and the young researchers have more sense. <br />
<br />
The goal, however, is OA, not "living up to the BOAI definition."<br />
<br />
And the growth rate is still absurdly slow, compared to what it could and ought to be (and have been).
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Definition of Open Access, 2017-01-23T06:05:49Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11940http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1194Measuring Open Access Mandate Compliance
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1192-Measuring-Open-Access-Mandate-Compliance.html
<!-- s9ymdb:897 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="300" height="150" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/greencomply.jpg" alt="" />To measure compliance with an immediate-deposit (Green OA) mandate, the following would provide an estimate:<blockquote>1. Require immediate deposit of the dated letter of acceptance.<br />
<br />
2. Require immediate deposit of the accepted final draft. (You and I know that the publisher's PDF-of-record is superfluous for OA.)<br />
<br />
3. Retrieve the institution's published output from WoS monthly (it is updated about monthly) or from SCOPUS via institution-name search.<br />
<br />
4. Check (via software) each title for whether and when it is deposited (deposit date)<br />
<br />
5. Compare deposit date with dated acceptance date.<br />
<br />
6. Calculate percentage of monthly output that is deposited, as well as the latency (timing) of the deposit relative to the acceptance date.<br />
<br />
7. Calculate proportion and length of OA embargo on deposits.<br />
<br />
8. Calculate the volume of Request-Button traffic for embargoed deposits (requests, compliances, latencies)</blockquote>.No, this is not too complicated nor too demanding (as everyone will of course cry). It's exactly the simple, natural compliance monitoring system that needs to be put into place in order to establish a natural long-term practice, one that ensures that immediate Green OA is always provided. <br />
<br />
Of course, the institutions and funders need to stand firm on the carrots/sticks: Non-compliance should have consequences. It doesn't take much, because the policy does not ask for much.<br />
<br />
Once it's a reliable and universal habit, the checks and stats can become less frequent.<blockquote>Vincent-Lamarre, P, Boivin, J, Gargouri, Y, Larivière, V. and Harnad, S. (2016) <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/370203/">Estimating Open Access Mandate Effectiveness: The MELIBEA Score</a>. <em>Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST)</em> 67(11) 2815-2828 <br />
</blockquote>
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Self-Archiving Mandates, 2017-01-12T14:24:45Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11920http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1192Table ronde: « Horizon 2021: Les avenirs possibles du libre accès »
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1191-Table-ronde-Horizon-2021-Les-avenirs-possibles-du-libre-acces.html
<iframe width="640" height="360" src="https://tv.uqam.ca/embed/55538" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Rationale for OA, 2017-01-11T23:52:46Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11910http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1191OA Overview January 2017
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1190-OA-Overview-January-2017.html
<!-- s9ymdb:801 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="300" height="238" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/greengold3.jpg" alt="" />(1) The old librarians double-payment argument against subscription publishing (the institution pays once to fund the research, then a second time to buy back the publication) is false (and silly, actually) in the letter (though on the right track in spirit).<br />
<br />
(2) No, the institution that pays for the research output is not paying a second time to buy it back. Institutional journal subscriptions are not for buying back their own research output. They already have their own research output. They are buying <em>in</em> the research output of <em>other</em> institutions, and of other countries, with their journal subscriptions. So no double-payment there, even if you reckon it at the funder- or the tax-payer-level instead of the level of the institution that pays for the subscription.<br />
<br />
(3) The problem was never double-payment (for subscriptions): It was (a) (huge) overpayment for institutional access and (b) completely intolerable and counterproductive access-denial for researchers at institutions that couldnt or wouldnt pay for subscriptions to any given journal (and there are tens of thousands of research journals): The users that are the double losers there are (i) <em>all</em> researchers at <em>all</em> the institutions that produce <em>all</em> research output (who lose <em>all</em> those of their would-be users who are at non-subscribing institutions for any given journal) and (ii) <em>all</em> researchers at <em>all</em> the non-subscribing institutions for any given journal, who lose access to all non-subscribed research.<br />
<br />
Now take a few minutes to think through the somewhat more complicated but much more accurate and informative version (3) of the double-payment fallacy in (1).<br />
<br />
The solution is very clear, and has been clear for close to 30 years now (but not reached nor even grasped by most):<br />
<br />
(4) <em>Peer-reviewed research should be freely accessible to all its users</em>. It is give-away research. The authors get no money for it: they (and their institutions and funders and tax-payers) only seek readers, users, uptake and impact.<br />
<br />
(5) The only non-obsolete service that peer-reviewed journals still perform in the online era is <em>peer review itself</em> (and they dont even do most of that: researchers do all the refereeing for free, but a competent editor has to understand the submissions, pick the right referees, umpire their reports, and make sure that the necessary revisions are done by the author). Journals today earn from $1500 to $5000 or more per article they publish, combining all their subscription revenue, per article. Yet the true cost of peer review per article is a small fraction of that: My estimate is that its from $50 to $200 per round of refereeing. (Notice that its not per accepted paper: Theres no need to bundle the price of refereeing all rejected or many times re-refereed papers into the price of the winning losers who get accepted!)<br />
<br />
(6) So the refereeing service needs to be paid for at its true, fair price, per paper, regardless of whether the outcome is accept, revise + re-referee, or reject: a service fee for each round of refereeing.<br />
<br />
(7) Now comes open access publishing (Gold OA) which is not repeat <em>not</em> what I have just described in (6)!<br />
<br />
(8) Gold OA today is Fools Gold OA. It includes two kinds of double payment subtler than the simplistic notion in (1). It has to be calculated at the level of the double-payer, the institution: Institutions must, first, pay (A) for the subscription journals that they need and can afford: the ones whose contents are otherwise not accessible to their users but need to be. Then, second, they must pay (B) the FGold OA publication costs for each paper that their researchers publish in a non-subscription journal. Thats already a double-payment: Subscription costs plus FGold OA costs. The S costs are for incoming S-research from all other institutions and the FG costs are for their own outgoing FG research output. And the FG costs are not $50-$200 per paper for peer review, but $1000 or much more for FG publication fees (now ask yourself what are the expenses for which those fees are payment!).<br />
<br />
(9) And there is another double here in some cases, because sometimes the S-journal and the FG-journal are the <em>same journal</em>: The "hybrid" subscription/ FG publishers: These publishers offer FG as an option that the author can choose to pay for. That is double-dipping. And even if the hybrid journal promises to lower the subscription price per article in proportion to how many articles pay for FG, that just means that the foolish institution that is paying for the FG is subsidizing, with its huge payment per article, the subscription costs of all the other subscribing institutions.<br />
<br />
(10) So FG is not only outrageously over-priced, but it means double-payment for institutions, the possibility of double-dipping by publishers, and, at best, paying institutions subsidizing the S institutions with their FG double payments.<br />
<br />
(11) So FG does not work: Publishers cannot and will not cut costs and downsize to just providing peer review at a fair price (Fair Gold) while there are still fat subscription revenues as well as fat FG payments to be had.<br />
<br />
(12) Yet there is another way that OA can be provided, instead of via Fools Gold OA and that is via <em>Green OA</em> self-archiving, by their own authors, of all refereed, accepted, published papers, in their own institution's Green OA <a href="http://roar.eprints.org/">Institutional Repositories</a>.<br />
<br />
(13) Not only does Green OA provide OA itself, but once it reaches close to 100%, it allows all institutions to cancel their subscription journals, making subscriptions no longer sustainable, thereby forcing publishers to cut costs by unbundling peer review and its true costs from all the obsolete costs of printing paper, producing PDF, distributing the journal, archiving the journal, etc. Thats all done by the global network of Green OA Institutional repositories, leaving only the peer review as the last remaining essential service of peer-reviewed journal publishers. That's affordable, sustainable, Green-OA-based "Fair Gold" OA.<br />
<br />
(14) 100% Green OA could have been had over 20 years ago, if researchers had just provided it. Some did, but far too few. Most were too lazy, too dim-witted or too timid to do it. Then their institutions and funders tried to <a href="http://roarmap.eprints.org/">mandate OA</a> -- so publishers decided to embargo Green OA for at least a year from publication, offering Fool's Gold OA instead.<br />
<br />
(15) And thats about where we are now: Weak Green OA mandates providing some Green OA but not enough. Some FG OA, doubly compromised now by the fact that authors have been taking it up as a kind of pay-to-publish opportunity, with weak peer review (or none at all, in the case of the many <a href="https://scholarlyoa.com/publishers/">scam FG journals</a> who are rushing to cash in on the Fools Gold Rush). Meanwhile OA activists are foolishly clamouring ore-emptively for open data, CC-BY licenses and open science when they dont even have OA yet, subscriptions are doing fine, and FG is outrageously over-priced and double-paid, hence unaffordable.<br />
<br />
(16) There are simple solutions for all this, but they require sensible, concerted action on the part of the research community: Green OA mandates need strengthening, monitoring and carrot/stick enforcement; there is a simple way around publishers Green OA embargos (the <a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/268511/">Copy Request Button</a> , and a few <a href="http://roarmap.eprints.org/94/">institutions</a> and <a href="http://roarmap.eprints.org/362/">funders</a> are sensibly using the eligibility rules for research evaluation as the carrot/stick to ensure compliance with the mandate. <br />
<br />
But Ive tired of repeating myself and tired of waiting. It can all be said in these 16 points, and has been said, countless times. But its one thing to lead a bunch of researchers to the waters of Green OA self-archiving; its quite another to get them to stoop to drink. <br />
<br />
So let their librarians keep whinging incoherently about double-payment for yet another decade of lost research access and impact <br />
<br />
Harnad, S. (1995) Universal FTP Archives for Esoteric Science and Scholarship: A Subversive Proposal. In: Ann Okerson & James O'Donnell (Eds.) <em>Scholarly Journals at the Crossroads; A Subversive Proposal for Electronic Publishing</em>. Washington, DC., Association of Research Libraries, June 1995. http://www.arl.org/scomm/subversive/toc.html<br />
<br />
<u>______</u> . (2010) No-Fault Peer Review Charges: The Price of Selectivity Need Not Be Access Denied or Delayed. <em>D-Lib Magazine</em> 16 (7/8). http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/21348/<br />
<br />
<u>______</u> (2014) The only way to make inflated journal subscriptions unsustainable: Mandate Green Open Access. <em>LSE Impact of Social Sciences Blog</em> 4/28 http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2014/04/28/inflated-subscriptions-unsustainable-harnad/<br />
<br />
<u>______</u> (2015) Open Access: What, Where, When, How and Why. In: <em>Ethics, Science, Technology, and Engineering: An International Resource</em> eds. J. Britt Holbrook & Carl Mitcham, (2nd edition of Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, and Ethics, Farmington Hills MI: MacMillan Reference) http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/361704/<br />
<br />
<u>______</u> (2015) Optimizing Open Access Policy. <em>The Serials Librarian</em>, 69(2), 133-141 http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/381526/ <br />
<br />
<u>______</u> (2016) <em>Open Access Archivangelist: The Last Interview</em>? CEON Otwarta Nauka (Open Science), Summer Issue http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/398024/<br />
<br />
Sale, A., Couture, M., Rodrigues, E., Carr, L. and Harnad, S. (2014) Open Access Mandates and the "Fair Dealing" Button. In: <em>Dynamic Fair Dealing: Creating Canadian Culture Online</em> (Rosemary J. Coombe & Darren Wershler, Eds.) http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18511/<br />
<br />
Swan, A; Gargouri, Y; Hunt, Megan; & Harnad, S (2015) Open Access Policy: Numbers, Analysis, Effectiveness. Pasteur4OA Workpackage 3 Report. http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/375854/<br />
<br />
Vincent-Lamarre, Philippe, Boivin, Jade, Gargouri, Yassine, Larivière, Vincent and Harnad, Stevan (2016) <em>Estimating Open Access Mandate Effectiveness: The MELIBEA Score.</em> Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST) 67(11) 2815-2828 http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/370203/
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Rationale for OA, 2017-01-06T04:07:32Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11900http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1190CCTV, web-streaming and crowd-sourcing to sensitize public to animal suffering
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1189-CCTV,-web-streaming-and-crowd-sourcing-to-sensitize-public-to-animal-suffering.html
<!-- s9ymdb:896 --><img class="serendipity_image_right" width="200" height="200" style="float: right; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://openaccess.eprints.org/uploads/CCTV360.jpg" alt="" /><strong>AN INTERVIEW WITH PROFESSOR HARNAD</strong><br />
<br />
Interview by Michael Gold <a href="http://alaw.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/Animal-Justice-UK-Issue-2.pdf">Animal Justice UK (2) 2016</a> (<a href="http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/403330/">hyperlinked version</a>)<br />
<br />
Stevan Harnad is Professor of Psychology at the Université du Québec à Montréal and Professor of Web Science in the Department of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief of the journal Animal Sentience.<br />
<br />
<strong>Abstract:</strong> <em>A 2-stage strategy to (1) inform and sensitize the public -- through CCTV, web-streaming and crowd-sourcing -- about the suffering inflicted on animals in commercial breeding and use for meat, dairy, fur and fashion, followed by (2) a graduated tax on producers, vendors and consumers of animal products, claimable as a rebate by producers, vendors and consumers of non-animal alternative products.</em><br />
<br />
<strong>MG: In 2004 the [UK] Court of Appeal referred to animal suffering as being determined by scientific...value judgements. Given your background in cognitive science, how would you describe the current degree of scientific understanding of animal suffering or well- being?"</strong><br />
<br />
SH: It is certain that cognitive psychobiologists whose research is devoted to understanding how animals think (cognition) and feel (sentience) have extensive knowledge and evidence about what is required for animal well-being. Neither the law nor the courts have come anywhere near giving this evidence the weight it deserves, in the way it has done for the medical and psychiatric evidence on human well-being.<br />
<br />
Notice that I am using ordinary-language terms such as thinking, feeling and well-being rather than abstract technical terms that formalise and desensitise what is really at issue. Another such ordinary-language term that everyone understands is suffering. Many current laws allow enormous amounts of suffering to be inflicted on animals - suffering that is evident to anyone who looks and feels, and that does not need scientific analyses to "prove" the victims are indeed suffering.<br />
<br />
Trying to protect animals from suffering operates under an enormous logical handicap, well-known to philosophers: the other-minds problem. It is logically impossible to know for sure (prove), even for scientists, whether and what any entity other than oneself is feeling. Even language is not a guarantor: if someone says that hurts, they could be pretending, or they could even be a robot - a zombie, that does not feel at all. Logically speaking.<br />
<br />
But it is obvious to all who are trying to be honest about the problem of human-inflicted animal suffering that it is disingenuous to invoke the other-minds problem in order to create doubt about suffering in animals where we would not invoke it in the case of humans. We know that just about all mammals and birds suffer if they are confined, deprived of access to their kin and kind, or forcibly manipulated. We recognise the mammalian and avian signs of stress, pain, fear and depression; and where we lack personal experience (such as with reptiles, fish or invertebrates), there are not only scientists but lay people with abundant experience observing and caring for animals who are highly capable and more than willing guide us.<br />
<br />
It would be a shameful pretence to act solemnly as if there were any uncertainty about the vast, obvious amounts of gratuitous and indefensible agony that humans are inflicting on animals in the bred-animal product industries.<br />
<br />
Stress is a formal, sanitised term for harm - both physical and mental, both felt and unfelt - that is incurred by an organisms body. There do exist some subtle cases of stimulation, manipulation, and background conditions where it is not yet known scientifically whether they are stressful. Those are the unresolved scientific problems. But the elephant in the room the countless instances and practices that not only virtually all cognitive psychobiologists but all decent laymen would immediately recognise as suffering are still so immeasurably widespread, legally permissible, and un-policed today that we are far from reaching cases where there is any genuine uncertainty that calls for scientific expertise.<br />
<br />
<strong>MG: In the same judgement it was stated that emergent evidence...[for] an identifiable deficit in net well-being caused by restricted feed could give credence to a legal challenge against the practice. Does this type of statement imply courts trailing behind scientific consensus in their reasoning?</strong><br />
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SH: It is very hard, even for a cognitive scientist, to force oneself into the sanitized, almost psychopathic jargon of restricted feed and identifiable deficit in net well-being when the question really being asked is whether starving chickens causes suffering.<br />
<br />
Broilers have been selectively bred to grow from chicks into adult-sized (indeed pathologically oversized and deformed) invalids in an extremely short time. Not only does this put tremendous strain on their bodies and legs (crippling them and sometimes making their legs snap off) but it makes them so ill that they cannot survive till breeding age unless the ones that are to be usedas breeders are systematically starved throughout their short, agonized lives so as to slow the rate of their devastating growth enough to allow their pathological genotype to keep being reproduced.<br />
<br />
Of course it causes suffering to be kept constantly on the threshold of starvation. There is hardly the need for the learned opinion of poultry scientists to attest to this unless one is trying to make mischievous or malevolent use of the other-minds problem to protect economic interests.<br />
<br />
<strong>MG: Is there scope for greater cooperation between lawyers and scientists regarding animal welfare? How do you think this could be achieved?</strong><br />
<br />
SH: Yes, there is enormous scope. And enormous good will as well, especially among the younger generation of lawyers. And cognitive psychobiologists are also people -people who know that nonhuman animals, like human ones, are feeling creatures that can be, and are being, made to suffer gratuitously by economics-driven industry, perverted, industry-driven "animal science," and uninformed as well as misinformed consumer demand. If asked, the impartial experts are well-equipped and eager to inform the public and protect and help promote sentient animals' well-being. That is the convergence and collaboration that the journal (Animal Sentience) is devoted to fostering.<br />
<br />
The way we are doing it is through open peer commentary. Every target article published in the journal is circulated around the world, across all specialities to zoologists, ethologists, ecologists, evolutionists, psychologists, legal scholars, bioethicists, nutritionists, veterinarians, social scientists and animal activists inviting them to provide commentary that elaborates, integrates, critiques, supplements or applies the content of the target article. The commentaries are published as formal mini-articles following the target article; the author responds to them. The journal is online and open access so that the target articles as well as the commentaries can be published as soon as they are reviewed and accepted. The target article by the biologist Brian Key on whether fish feel pain has already drawn over 50 commentaries. Among the target articles currently undergoing commentary are ones by: a philosopher (Colin Klein) and a biologist (Andrew Barron) on insect sentience; an economist (Yew- Kwang Ng) on welfare biology; a law professor (Martine Lachance) on veterinary reporting of abuse; a philosopher (Mark Rowlands) on animal personhood; a cognitive psychologist (Arthur Reber) on the origins of mind, and a psychologist (Thomas Zentall) on cognitive dissonance in animals and humans.<br />
<br />
Among the signs of progress are the growing number of countries and states where animals are being formally accorded the legal status of sentient beings with biological needs (instead of just property). Just here in Montreal, the Student Animal Legal Defense Fund of McGill University convened an important and influential symposium on animal law in 2010. (It was this symposium that made me into a vegan!) In the same year, the International Research Group on Animal law of the Université du Québec à Montrèal (UQAM) convened an international animal law conference in Paris on Animal Suffering: From Science to Law. Since then both France and Quebec have granted animals sentient-being status. A new course on animal law offered by Professor Alain Roy (specialist in child protection law) at the Université de Montréal was filled with one hundred law students on the very day it was announced.<br />
<br />
I will be directing the 7th Summer School in 2018 of the Cognitive Sciences Institute at UQAM, whose theme will be The Other-Minds Problem: Animal Sentience and Cognition. <br />
<br />
<strong>MG: You are passionate about pushing for CCTV in abattoirs. What would you like to happen?</strong><br />
<br />
SH: Not just in slaughterhouses. In all locales where animals are commercially bred, confined, or used in any way by humans.<br />
<br />
The strategy is in two phases:<br />
<br />
<u><em>Phase I (Public Sensitisation)</em></u><br />
<br />
1. Adopt a law that recognises animals as sentient beings with biological and psychological needs.<br />
<br />
2. Require, by law, 24-hour, 360-degree audio/video surveillance and recording at all locales where animals are commercially bred, confined, or used in any way by humans in order to monitor and ensure that the animals biological and psychological needs are being met according to existing regulations (which of course are far from adequate).<br />
<br />
3. As the enormous volume of surveillance recordings cannot possibly all be inspected by government inspectors, all the recordings must be coded, web-streamed and made permanently open-access online, so that their inspection can be crowd-sourced for public inspection: A clear description of the pertinent existing regulations (with which the producers need to comply) has to be made available online for the general public, and relative to those existing regulations, any citizen can then report any observed violation, noting the code of the video on which it occurs and the timing of the violation.<br />
<br />
4. Not only will this help immeasurably to ensure that existing (inadequate) regulations are complied with, and thus ensure that what goes on is only that which is allowed by existing law, but it will have the even more important effect of allowing the public to witness all the horrors that go on that are still allowed by the existing laws (especially in industrial breederies, transport and slaughterhouses).<br />
<br />
5. It is these authorised horrors that Ag-Gag laws and lobbying are aggressively trying to prevent the public from witnessing.<br />
<br />
6. The hope is that once the public has open access to the full scale of the horrors (especially in industrial breederies, transport and slaughterhouses) the majority of thus-sensitised citizens will exert pressure on their elected lawmakers not only to make existing regulations increasingly rigorous, in the protection of animals biological and psychological needs, but also for introducing legislation for a reduction in what is permissible and a transition to alternatives to animal production and consumption:<br />
<br />
<u><em>Phase II (Graduated Taxation on Animal Production and Consumption)</em></u><br />
<br />
1. Require, by law, a surcharge on the production, vending and consumption of animal products, available as a rebate to incentivise the production, vending and consumption of non- animal alternatives.<br />
<br />
2. The percentage surcharge can be increased with time.<br />
<br />
3. The surcharge should be imposed on all three involved parties: the producer, the vendor and the consumer.<br />
<br />
4. The rebate should likewise be available to all three parties: the producer, the vendor and the consumer. (The implementation of the rebate will be complicated initially, but that should not be accepted as an excuse for not imposing the surcharge. With thought, testing and planning, a fair, efficient rebate system can be developed by the time the graduated surcharge reaches significant levels.)<br />
<br />
5. For producers, especially, the rebates will provide strong incentives to produce non-animal alternatives.<br />
<br />
6. All surplus in the tax revenues should be used to provide sanctuary for the former production- animals that are liberated by the change in production and consumption patterns. And any left-over from that should be used to invest in the development of non-animal alternatives.<br />
<blockquote><em>Michael Gold is a first year law student at Queen Mary University and will be piloting one of ALAWs first university subgroups. </em></blockquote><br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Animal Ethics, 2016-11-25T23:04:25Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11890http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1189Planet Trumped
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1188-Planet-Trumped.html
The accession to power of the likes of Donald Trump is by far the greatest catastrophe -- moral and environmental -- to befall the planet since WW II, perhaps ever.<br />
<br />
With control of the White House, the Senate, the House of Representatives and the Supreme Court all ceded to Trump, all the US consitution's intended checks-and-balances are check-mated and Trump's malign destructiveness is unchecked. <br />
<br />
Since the free and open media helped get him there, it is unlikely that they will be able to constrain him now.<br />
<br />
Bottomless ignorance, incompetence, pettiness and malevolence have been empowered limitlessly.<br />
<br />
And by 2020 immense, irreversible damage will have been done. <br />
<br />
Even a violent revolution could not prevent it, just make it worse.<br />
<br />
Only a quick impeachment from one of the pending court cases against him can mitigate the damage (though Pence et al are not much better).<br />
<br />
<iframe width="854" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/-b5brcCPJcw" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Politics, 2016-11-12T15:51:49Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11880http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1188Exchange with President of Hungarian Academy of Sciences
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1186-Exchange-with-President-of-Hungarian-Academy-of-Sciences.html
<strong>From:</strong> Lovász László <br />
<strong>Subject:</strong> Letter from President Lovasz<br />
<strong>Date:</strong> October 24, 2016 at 3:38:45 AM GMT-4<br />
<br />
Dear Colleagues:<br />
<br />
I address this letter to Honorary and External members of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Several of you have resigned from ourAcademy, protesting the policies of the Hungarian government and assuming that the Academy did not work to mitigate these. This is a very serious loss for us. I understand their concerns, and respect their decision, but I would like to make some comments about the Academy's position. <br />
<br />
Democracy in Hungarian society is still evolving and sadly it has been and still is deeply divided between - roughly speaking - a liberal and conservative side. Throughout society, including intellectuals, this leads to opposing camps, and the tribal mentality often dampens the critical balanced approach that could be expected from such people.<br />
<br />
The Academy is one of the very few places where such divisions nevertheless enable creative activities, and where people voting for either side are willing and able to cooperate for the benefit of science and education. I was nominated and elected by all members on both sides of the line, and I promised to maintain this fruitful cooperation. From this it follows that I should not make any political statements in the name of the Academy, since I was not elected on any political platform. Any political statement would be opposed by a considerable fraction of the members.<br />
<br />
Of course, it is not always easy to draw the line between political and moral concerns. On issues when politicians from both sides advocate one-bit answers, we try to express a scientifically supported, balanced opinion. This requires rigorous work and advice from experts. For example, our Academy did carry out a thorough and (I hope) unbiased study of the composition of migrants, and with some recommendations, released it to the government; this is now publicly available. On the also hotly debated issue of public education, we did not take sides on whether it should be run by the national or local governments, but started more than a dozen research groups to design education methodology based on real experiments performed in real schools. An extensive volume about the status of the Hungarian legal system has just been published by our research institute (this is also freely available from our web site). We publish well-researched (and often critical) studies about many other legal, sociological, educational, economic issues of our society. <br />
<br />
We must cooperate with the government (which was reelected with more than 50% of the votes cast) on a number of issues like research funding (we maintain a research network of institutes employing about 3000 researchers), education, water management and other problems raised by climate change, just to mention a few.<br />
<br />
I regret the resignation of several of our external and honorary members. I hope very much that those who have resigned will maintain their close relation with the Academy, their collaboration with Hungarian scientists. I also hope that your expert and wise advice will help the Academy to work for progress and ensure that decisions are made on scientific basis. I want to thank those external and honorary members who expressed their support for a policy as outlined above.<br />
<br />
I am at your disposal should you have any questions, and so are your collaborators in research, as well as the leaders of the section of your research area. <br />
<br />
<strong>Laszlo Lovasz<br />
President, Hungarian Academy of Sciences</strong><br />
<br />
<strong>From:</strong> Stevan Harnad <br />
<strong>Subject:</strong> Reply to Letter from President Lovasz<br />
<strong>Date:</strong> October 24, 2016 at 9:05:09 AM GMT-4<br />
<strong>To:</strong> Lovász László <br />
<br />
Dear Professor Lovasz,<br />
<br />
Thank you for your message to External and Honorary Members.<br />
<br />
I regret that I cannot agree that the underlying issues are merely a matter of political differences of opinion between between liberals and conservatives in an evolving democracy. <br />
<br />
Nor can I agree that in the name of keeping science separate from politics there is nothing more the Academy can do. I think the Open Letter of the Internal Members and Doctors indicates what the Academy can do.<br />
<br />
But I fully understand the difficult position you are in, in view of the fact that the Internal Members salaries and pensions as well as their research grants are under the control of the Orban regime.<br />
<br />
Please believe that our resignations and critique are not intended to harm the Academy but to help it.<br />
<br />
This is a reflection of my view only. I do not speak for the other resignees.<br />
<br />
Yours sincerely,<br />
<strong>Stevan Harnad</strong><br />
<br />
<strong>From:</strong> Stevan Harnad<br />
<strong>Subject:</strong> Fwd: Letter from President Lovasz<br />
<strong>Date:</strong> October 24, 2016 at 8:34:23 AM GMT-4<br />
<strong>To:</strong> Thomas Jovin, Israel Pecht, Torsten Wiesel, Daniel C.Dennett<br />
<br />
Dear colleagues,<br />
<br />
The... letter, sent today by the President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences to all the External and Honorary Members, is unfortunately a confirmation of the degree to which the Academy is now under the thumb of the Orban regime. It recites the all-too-familiar and highly misleading talking points of the Orban regime, marshalled for every occasion: <br />
<br />
(1) Hungary and the Academy have democracy and pluralism <br />
<br />
(2) the issues cited by the resignees are merely political differences between liberals and conservatives<br />
<br />
(3) the current government is a reflection of the free will of the majority of the populace<br />
<br />
(4) an Academy of Science must be independent of politics<br />
<br />
(There is also some muted indication that the Presidents and the Academys hands are tied because they are dependent on the government for support and subsidies. This is certainly true. But the rest is quite the opposite of the truth.)<br />
<br />
1. Democracy in Hungary is not evolving, it is devolving, being systematically dismantled by the Orban regime.<br />
<br />
2. The differences among the members of the Academy, and in the general population, are not differences between liberals and conservatives, but between proponents of democracy and proponents (or fellow-travellers) of autocracy.<br />
<br />
Opposing the Orban regime are not just liberals but centrists and conservatives, although they are all collectively labelled as liberals (and communists and traitors) by the Orban regime. Even the neo-nazi Jobbik party, which is as far right as one can be, is opposed to Orbans kleptocracy.<br />
<br />
3. The current government is not a reflection of the free will of the populace: It is the reflection of a population under duress from an ever more autocratic and corrupt machine that is controlling their media, their education, their livelihoods, their health, their laws, their tax money and their elections. None of this is a liberal/conservative matter.<br />
<br />
4. In a democracy, an Academy of Sciences should be independent from politics. In an increasingly flagrant autocracy, an Academy of Sciences, like every individual and institution, should be opposing the autocracy in any way it can.<br />
<br />
The <a href="http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hungary/">many international, nonpartisan reports in the database linked to our call for resignations</a> contain some of the abundant and definitive evidence of the ever-growing anti-demcratic actions of the Orban regime.<br />
<br />
The signatories of the <a href="http://hungarianspectrum.org/2016/10/15/open-letter-to-professor-laszlo-lovacs-president-of-the-hungarian-academy-of-sciences/">Internal Members' and Doctors call for the Academy to investigate and openly debate these actions</a>. This is the way the Academy can do its part in trying to restore freedom and democracy in Hungary. Not in trying to reassure External Members that these are all just partisan political differences on which science is best served by remaining mute.<br />
<br />
I close with an illustration of how the familiar tactics of the Orban regime are again palpable in Professor Lovaszs letter (without a doubt vetted and partly also redacted, by the Orban regimes minders): <br />
<br />
One of the signatories of the <a href="http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2011/02/hungarian-academicians-blast-government-over-inquiry-research-funds">2011 Open Letter about the "philosopher affair</a> (which had been a microcosm and harbinger of what was to ensue in the country as a whole in the next 5 years) had been successfully persuaded to withdraw his signature by receiving a barrage of the apparently polarized views on the issue (government press and police harassment campaigns against Academy members critical of the Orban regime) that this was just a partisan political matter on which he could not make a judgment one way or the other. The ensuing five years have since demonstrated to the world that the polarization is not between liberals and conservatives in a democracy, but between opponents and collaborators of a malign and sinking autocracy. This time this prominent academician resigned. I doubt that Professor Lovaszs letter will persuade him to withdraw his resignation, or to rue it.<br />
<br />
Yours sincerely,<br />
<strong>Stevan Harnad</strong><br />
Open Access Archivangelismnospam@example.com (Stevan Harnad)
Freedom of Expression, 2016-11-06T00:01:06Zhttp://openaccess.eprints.org/wfwcomment.php?cid=11860http://openaccess.eprints.org/rss.php?version=1.0&type=comments&cid=1186