Stevan Harnad |
Gold
and green are the two strategies outlined eight years ago when the OA movement
was born, and are viewed as
being essential components of any successful transition to OA.
By
contrast, Finch concluded that the main vehicle should now be gold OA, either
via pure open access journals or via hybrid journals, and that this should be funded by article processing charges (APCs).
At the same time, Finch argued, it was time to downgrade green OA, and reduce the role of institutional repositories to merely, "providing access to research data and to grey literature" and assisting in digital preservation.
Set
alongside the Finch proposals, OA advocates quickly concluded that RCUK’s
policy was a godsend.
One
of the first to applaud the new policy was long-standing OA advocate, and
self-styled archivangelist, Stevan Harnad. The minute the
report was published a relieved Harnad began flooding mailing lists with messages
congratulating RCUK on coming up with a policy that not only defied Finch, but
was stronger than its current OA policy.
But
as Harnad set about talking up the policy, and seeking to win over sceptics and
doubters, he himself began to have doubts. And eventually he was driven to the
conclusion that he had no option but to withdraw his support for the RCUK policy —
which he now characterises as “autistic”, and a “foolish, wasteful and
counterproductive step backwards”.
How
has what at first sight seemed so desirable rapidly become something terrible?
Curious to find out, I contacted Harnad. Below I publish the email interview
that emerged from our conversation.
The interview begins …
RP: When RCUK’s
new OA policy was published on
16th July you wrote that it had “shown
sense and independence” in ignoring the recommendations in the Finch Report.
Instead, you said, RCUK had “re-confirmed their policy of mandatory author
self-archiving in Green OA repositories.” The same day you also said, “The publishing
industry’s lobbying efforts have failed with RCUK and the EC; instead, the
global research community’s self-help efforts to protect the interests of
publicly funded research have triumphed”
I
believe this is not your view now. What changed?
SH:
No, I regret to have to say that this is no longer my
view. As soon as I saw the new RCUK policy I spotted a potential bug in it, but
I was so relieved that it still allowed Green OA self-archiving as a means of
compliance, that I just hoped the bug would not be picked up on (given that
there has been so much blindness to detail and subtlety already in OA, both pro
and con).
But now I see that it has been picked up on — so far
only by the author community and some neutral observers but, I am sure, it will
soon be picked up on and acted upon, by the publishing community, and the
consequences will be terrible.
RP: What is the
problem?
SH:
The bug is this: RCUK, in a well-meaning effort to pressure journals to either
offer a Gold option or a Green option (within an allowable embargo period), have
used the oft-mooted strategy of a “pre-existing contract” with their funder that
would bind RCUK fundees when they choose a journal to publish in and negotiate
the copyright agreement with the journal.
So the RCUK policy became: RCUK fundees may only
publish in journals that either offer Gold OA or Green OA (within an allowable
embargo period).
Now think for a moment: If you were a journal
publisher — including, and indeed especially one of the publishers of the 60%
of journals that already endorse immediate, un-embargoed Green OA today — what
would you do, when faced with a policy like that?
RP: What do you predict?
SH:
The answer is obvious: You would offer to “allow” your authors to pay you for
hybrid Gold OA (while continuing to collect your usual subscription revenues)
and, for good measure, you would ratchet up the Green OA embargo length (up to the
date your grand-children finished their university education!) to make sure
your authors pay you for hybrid Gold rather than picking the cost-free option
that you fear might eventually pose a risk to your subscription revenues!
(The endless embargo would almost not even be
necessary, since it looks as if the RCUK policy even dictates that if the
journal offers both Gold and Green, the fundee must pick Gold!)
AUTHOR CHOICE
RP: Your main concern, I assume, relates to Section 4
of the RCUK policy, which states:
The Research Councils will continue to support a mixed
approach to Open Access. The Research Councils will recognise a journal as
being compliant with their policy on Open Access if:
1. The journal provides via its own website immediate
and unrestricted access to the publisher’s final version of the paper (the
Version of Record), and allows immediate deposit of the Version of Record in
other repositories without restriction on re-use. This may involve payment of
an ‘Article Processing Charge’ (APC) to the publisher. The CC-BY license should
be used in this case.
Or
2. Where a publisher does not offer option 1 above,
the journal must allow deposit of Accepted Manuscripts that include all changes
resulting from peer review (but not necessarily incorporating the publisher’s
formatting) in other repositories, without restrictions on non-commercial
re-use and within a defined period. In this option no ‘Article Processing
Charge’ will be payable to the publisher. Research Councils will accept a delay
of no more than six months between on-line publication and a research paper
becoming Open Access, except in the case of research papers arising from
research funded by the AHRC and the ESRC where the maximum embargo period is 12
months.
What in your view is the specific
problem with this clause?
SH: The clause imagines that it will drive all publishers
either to become “pure” Gold OA, CC-BY publishers or at least publishers that
endorse Green (within an allowable embargo) otherwise they will face losing their RCUK authors.
But in reality it will simply drive subscription publishers
to offer hybrid Gold and to jack their Green embargos up to unallowable lengths
to make sure authors pick the hybrid Gold option (although the policy itself
sounds as if RCUK authors must already pick the hybrid Gold option if it is offered,
come what may).
And the consequence, besides the disastrous effects on
publisher policy, will be that the RCUK policy will provoke an author revolt —
not just because of the needless squandering of money diverted from scarce
research funds to pay publishers extra for hybrid Gold OA, but because of the
heavy-handed tampering with authors' choice of journals.
It’s one thing to mandate that the author must do a
few extra keystrokes to provide Green OA, quite another to tell authors: “you
may publish in this journal but not that.”
This extremely ill-thought-through new policy will sow
confusion, resentment, and, ultimately, non-compliance among UK authors. More
years of OA — and the opportunity to consolidate UK leadership in reaching it —
squandered because of short-sightedness, gold fever, rights rapture, and,
frankly, a goodly dose of stubbornness.
RP: Can you expand on what you mean when you say
that the RCUK policy will tamper with researchers' choice of journal?
SH: One could not possible tamper more directly!
Researchers are accustomed to choosing which journal is the most appropriate
for their paper, submitting there, and if successful, publishing there.
RCUK says you may no longer publish in any journal you
choose. You may only publish in a journal that either offers a Gold option or
endorses Green OA self-archiving within the allowable embargo interval (12
months for AHRC and ESRC, 6 months for the other RCs).
Moreover, if the journal offers Gold, you must choose
gold (and pay for it).
It is not clear how many paid-Gold articles RCUK plans
to subsidize for the author, but if it is not all of them, then that's yet
another constraint on the author's choice.
Hybrid OA
RP: So you believe that RCUK’s willingness to
accept hybrid OA is what is problematic?
SH: Not only is it problematic, it is the heart of the
problem: It is all too easy for a publisher to provide a pricey hybrid OA
option as a sop for those minded to “mandate” OA and foolish enough to be ready
to pay extra for it — while subscriptions are still paying in full for
publication, and there is no alternative to subscription access.
(See the section on “Hybrid OA and the Cheshire Cat’s
grin” below for further explanation of this point)
It’s precisely that alternative to subscription access
that globally mandated Green OA would provide. And it’s precisely the
availability of that alternative that would eventually induce the transition to
universal Gold OA that RCUK desires — but at a far lower price, and having
released the subscription cancelation funds to pay for it (instead of scarce
research funds).
But that’s the difference between post-Green Gold OA
and pre-emptive Fool’s Gold OA.
RP: Am I right in thinking that the RCUK policy
does not actually mention hybrid OA, but that you assume hybrid will be
acceptable because of the wording, which simply says, “This may involve payment of an ‘Article
Processing Charge’ (APC) to the publisher”. The point is that this can
encompass both gold and hybrid?
SH: You bet they don't mention it! They talk as if Gold
meant pure Gold (i.e., a Gold-only journal). But it's clearly on the cards,
since RCUK implies that if a journal offers either Gold OA *or* Green OA, the
RCUK fundee must choose the Gold. Only a hybrid Gold journal can offer
either/or.
My guess is that RCUK both remembered and didn't
remember that hybrid Gold was at issue.
RP: However, it is the
case, is it not, that currently few if any hybrid options offer CC-BY, which
the policy requires for gold OA. If so, I guess you are assuming that
publishers will start to offer CC-BY for their hybrid options so that they can
take best advantage of the policy?
SH: Offering CC-BY with the hybrid Gold option would be
no skin off the publisher's nose: well worth all the extra dosh. (How many
users really need it, and whether all authors would want to provide it is
another matter).
RP: If the implications
of the policy will be as you predict, is David Arnold therefore right to say, as he has on the Economist
web site, “Since the vast majority of journals now offer a gold route, the
green option is essentially redundant”?
SH:
It’s certainly not yet true that the vast majority of
journals already offer Gold, but it is alas very likely that they soon will.
The only hope now — for OA and the rest of the world —
is to try to contain this, as a piece of UK folly alone. This is especially
painful for me, because the UK was the first and undisputed leader in OA until
now.
The UK only generates 6% of worldwide research. If it
chooses to squander its scarce research funds on paying extra for hybrid Gold
OA instead of mandating cost-free Green OA perhaps the global economic crunch
will discourage the rest of the world from following this folly.
RP: Based on
what you say, how then would you characterise the difference between the Finch
recommendations and the RCUK policy?
SH:
Finch says Green is inadequate and should be downgraded to data-archiving and
digital preservation; all UK journal articles should be paid Gold.
RCUK says you can still provide cost-free Green
instead, if your journal does not offer Gold. (But it is obvious that all it
needs is the stroke of a pen for a subscription publisher, and then they too
offer hybrid Gold.)
Step backwards
RP: RCUK has
had an OA policy since 2006. I guess you would
say that the new policy is a step backwards?
SH:
It is a huge, foolish, wasteful and counterproductive step backwards.
In the naive hope of forcing all journals to convert
to affordable pure-Gold OA with CC-BY, with Green OA (within allowable embargo
limits) as a back-up, RCUK has instead given publishers an irresistible
incentive to offer hybrid Gold, along with unallowable Green embargoes to
ensure that authors take up the pricey option.
The result will be confusion, wasted resources, and
understandable and justified resentment and non-compliance from RCUK fundees.
All I can do is hope that exposing the UK OA fiasco will prevent it from being
emulated in the rest of the world.
My slimmer and fonder hope, of course, is that RCUK
will have the sense and integrity to recognize its mistake, once the unintended
negative consequences are pointed out, and will promptly correct it. It can
still be corrected completely with 2 simple patches.
RP: What
patches do you have in mind?
SH:
RCUK should:
(1)
Drop the implication that if a journal offers Green
and Gold, RCUK fundees must pick Gold
and
(2)
Downgrade to a request the requirement that the Green
option must be within the allowable embargo interval.
(The deposit of the refereed final draft would still
have to be done immediately upon publication, but the repository’s
“email-eprint-request” Button could be used to tide over user needs by
providing “Almost-OA” during the embargo.)
RP: Should they not consider prohibiting
the use of hybrid OA?
SH: There is no way to resurrect the current RCUK policy
in such a way as to rule out hybrid Gold: It would have to be re-conceived and
re-written completely. If that were done, all of the fatal bugs of the present
draft would be gone:
“(1)You must
provide at least gratis OA (within the allowable embargo). This can be done
either by paying for pure Gold OA (not hybrid) — but then the OA must be libre
and immediate and unembargoed (and the paper should be immediately deposited in the fundee's repository
anyway). Or (2) you can provide Gratis Green OA to the refereed final draft within
the allowable embargo (but the deposit must be made OA immediately upon acceptance for
publication).”
That would be a fine policy, especially if beefed up
with a link to submission to HEFCE [Higher Education Funding Council for England] for REF.
RP: How and why
do you think RCUK came up with the form of wording it did: did those drafting
the policy fail to see the implications of the wording, or was it (as you have suggested of the Finch
Report) worded in this way in order to placate scholarly journal publishers?
SH:
I am now pretty sure that the RCUK policy, at least, was not just the result of
successful publisher lobbying: Premature “gold fever” and “rights rapture” are just as
responsible.
Rights rapture
RP: Can you explain
this in more detail?
SH:
As you know, one of the most frequent and flagrant errors about OA is to assume
that OA is synonymous with OA publishing (i.e., Gold OA). The other is to assume that OA
is not “fully” OA unless it is “Libre OA” (i.e., free
online access, also called “Gratis OA,” plus various additional re-use rights,
such as the right to republish and re-sell articles, online as well as in
print, and the right to create derivative works, including re-mixes and
mash-ups, with such licenses as CC-BY).
Free online access (Gratis OA) means that research is
accessible to all its potential users, not just those whose institutions can
afford to subscribe to the journal in which it was published, so that the
research can be read, used, applied, and built upon in further research and
applications, to the full benefit of research progress and the tax-paying
public that funded it. Gratis OA includes the user’s capability of
screen-viewing, down-loading, linking, printing-off, storing, and data-mining
the text; in addition, harvesters like Google Scholar invert and index it for
navigability and search.
A conversion of journals from subscriptions to
affordable Gold OA as well as the licensing of some further re-use rights
(if/when users need them and authors want to provide them) are both desirable,
but not even faintly as important or urgent as free online access itself, which
is the revolutionary new possibility that the advent of the online medium had
opened up for researchers, launching the OA movement. But neither Libre OA nor Gold OA is worth paying extra for today, nor worth further delaying Green Gratis OA for.
The romance of OA also inspired many important new
possibilities, beyond free online access, including creative new forms of
online use and re-use as well as a possible solution to the journal
affordability problem.
The Gold OA model (which I, surely not the first, innocently mooted in 1994 as the
obvious way to cover publishing costs once research was all OA) particularly
captured the imagination and allegiance of OA advocates, including beleaguered
serials librarians and authors aggrieved with rapacious publishers.
But what the Gold OA and CC-BY enthusiasts forgot — as
they went on and on about the potential for gilded, mashed-up splendours over
and above free online access — was that the years kept going by and we still did not even have free online
access (Gratis OA).
And the reason is very simple: Green Gratis OA is
fully within reach today, because with institutional subscriptions already covering
the costs of publication (in full, and generously!) it is entirely within the
research community’s hands to provide Green Gratis OA, today, cost-free: All we
have to do is mandate it. Whereas Gold Libre OA is not within reach today,
because it is in the publishing community’s hands to provide, and costs extra
money — money that is currently locked into journal subscriptions.
So instead of grasping what is already entirely within
reach, cost-free, by mandating Green OA, RCUK wanted even more: It wanted all
publishers to convert to Gold OA, which would give immediate Libre OA, free of
re-use restrictions and embargoes. But not free of extra cost; nor of
restrictions on author journal choice.
So RCUK thought they could use the widely mooted
rationale that if authors are already bound by a pre-existing contractual
obligation to their funder or institution at the time they negotiate the
copyright agreement with their publishers, the publishers have to respect the
prior agreement, or lose their authors. So publishers have to offer Gold OA, or
at least Green OA (within the allowable embargo limit).
RP: Why was
this not obvious?
SH:
The three possibilities RCUK did not reckon on in advance were:
(1)
That publishers could simply offer RCUK authors pricey
hybrid Gold (rather than converting
to “pure” Gold publishing, as RCUK had anticipated) and jack up embargoes to
unallowable limits to make sure RCUK authors have to pick the hybrid Gold
option
(2)
That authors would resent the diversion and spending
of scarce research money to pay publishers for Gold OA, when Green OA can be
provided for free, and
(3)
That authors would resent the restrictions imposed on
their choice of journal, when Green OA (or at least 60% immediate-OA and 40% “Almost OA”) can be
provided without needlessly renouncing their journals of choice — or being
forced to renounce publishing further articles at all, once the allotted Gold
OA funds have been exhausted.
In short, RCUK did not take into account the
confusion, resentment and resistance their heavy-handed efforts to force
publishers into converting to Libre Gold OA would elicit from their fundees.
Autistic
RP: Do you have
reservations about any other aspects of RCUK’s policy?
SH:
Yes. It is remarkably autistic (or solipsistic), imagining that a local RCUK OA
“solution” could be implemented without taking into account the question of
compatibility and scalability for OA in the rest of the world.
Unlike the 2004 UK Select Committee’s timely, realistic,
and eminently scalable recommendation, which was that UK institutions and
funders should mandate Green OA and merely experiment with some funding for
Gold OA, RCUK are acting as if the experiment has been conducted, proved successful,
and now just needs to be implemented — by throwing money at Gold and forcing
publishers to offer it and authors to pick and pay for it.
RCUK should now admit it did not think it through
fully, and promptly apply the two patches sketched above. Then the UK will
again have a realistic, scalable solution for the rest of the world to follow.
If not, then UK OA is doomed to years more of
confusion and non-compliance.
RP: If you are
right, then what puzzles me is that OA advocates also failed to see the implications.
Not only did you initially applaud the RCUK policy, but so too apparently did SPARC Europe (which “warmly
welcomed” the new policy, describing it as a stronger
policy). Likewise, Peter Suber wrote on 16th July,
“Instead of favouring gold over green, and even disparaging green, the new RCUK
policy favours green over gold”. You are saying that in reality the reverse is
actually the case I believe.
SH:
I can’t speak for others, but in my case it was a combination of:
(1) shock
at the Finch recommendation, which was to phase out Green altogether, and just
fund Gold, exactly as publishers had been urging for the past several years
(once they had realized that the clamour for OA was not going to go away, and
had to be placated somehow)
(2) relief
that RCUK quickly announced that it would continue to “allow” Green as an
option, and, frankly,
(3) some
conscious wishful thinking (if not self-delusion), and the desire to put a more positive spin on the new
RCUK policy than its own wording quite warranted, especially to limit the
damage that mindless emulation of the Finch recommendations could do to the
global OA movement.
I am ashamed to say that I even told Richard van Noorden, a journalist for Nature, that I hoped he would not
mention the awful contingency that the RCUK might inspire (hybrid Gold plus
hyper-embargoes), in the hope that publishers would not notice it.
In a word, a combination of stupefaction and stupidity
on my part.
RP: Do you
anticipate that the RCUK policy will be changed, or does the research community
now have to live with it?
SH:
I know for sure that the policy can easily be fixed so that it works and provides
a scalable model for the rest of the world to emulate. I was shocked by the
Finch recommendations, and am now equally appalled by the RCUK policy.
But I have not forgotten the immense surprise and joy
I felt when you, Richard, contacted me in Barcelona in 2004 to ask me for my
reaction to the UK Select Committee’s recommendation.
That was the first I heard of that outcome which,
against all odds, resisted the urgings of both the anti-OA publishing lobby and
the nascent pro-Gold-OA publishing lobby (as reported in your interview of BMC’s Vitek
Tracz), and instead recommended mandating Green OA.
Good sense and good judgment can again prevail in the
UK, and the RCUK can make the two patches that will not only salvage its policy
but accelerate its global emulation. There is no shame in admitting an error,
and only kudos for fixing it forthwith.
Green OA is clear
RP: The other
major source of research funding in the UK comes via HEFCE. HEFCE has announced that it plans to
introduce an OA policy, and it is expected that this will have a green component
to it. Speaking to me recently Martin
Hall, Vice-Chancellor at the University of Salford, said of the proposed HEFCE
policy:
It will be
important to see exactly what HEFCE means by “green”. For the purposes of the
2020 Research Excellence Framework (or its equivalent), HEFCE could merely require that the author’s last
version is made available via a repository (a condition that can, of course, be
met at present).
Alternatively,
they may require open access to a version of record, which will be a big push
towards full and upfront APCs. HEFCE (in contrast with the Research Councils)
is also going to have to work out what to require for research outputs that can
(and must) be submisable, but which are for research not supported with public
funds. The details will be important here.
What is your view on this?
What can HEFCE do to ameliorate the weaknesses you see in the RCUK policy?
SH: As I will be shortly stating on your blog, I must say
with profound regret that Martin Hall, who I had thought was a comrade-in-arms
in the quest for OA, has turned out not to have a clear understanding of OA at
all.
What is meant by “green” is very clear: The deposit of
the author’s refereed final draft in an OA repository immediately upon
publication (unembargoed). That is Green OA.
A Green OA mandate, however, has to live within a
constraint, namely, the fact that 40% of publishers still demand an embargo of
various lengths before the deposit is made OA. The compromise is to mandate
immediate deposit and urge (but not require)
immediate OA. The rest will take care of itself naturally, of its own accord
(with the help of the Button, the increasingly palpable benefits of OA, and
human nature).
HEFCE should without a shadow of a doubt require that
the author’s refereed final draft be
deposited in the author’s institutional repository.
This will reinforce institutional and funder Green OA
mandate adoption as well as facilitating both author compliance and the
institutional monitoring and assurance of compliance along the lines that Bernard Rentier, the rector of U. Liège has successfully implemented within the
university and with the Belgian funding council: designating repository deposit
as the mechanism for submitting papers for research assessment.
If HEFCE insisted instead on the deposit of the
publisher’s version of record (with its far more restrictive publisher
constraints) that would be another gratuitous and costly mistake, gratuitously insisting on more than what is necessary — when the author’s draft is enough, and already able to do
so much more good in reinforcing Green OA mandates and hence OA — at the cost of a lost opportunity to accelerate Green OA growth.
FOOL'S-GOLD RUSH
RP: You have
always maintained that OA is a no-brainer,and have characterised it as "Raincoat Science". I wonder if the misapprehensions over the RCUK policy do not cast doubt on your assertion. The devil, it seems, is in the details.
SH:
But the details are trivial and obvious. Policy makers just have to listen: not
to ideology blinkered by gold dust and rights rapture but to simple, practical,
cause-effect evidence and reasons.
RP: But if the
end result of the RCUK policy is to increase the number of research papers that
are freely available on the Internet does it matter so much?
SH:
Let me make this perfectly clear: My own goal is and always has been OA — by
which I mean, first and foremost, online access to peer-reviewed research
articles, free for all would-be users, not just those at institutions that can
afford subscription access to the journal in which it was published (“Gratis
OA”).
I do not care in the least how that Gratis OA is
provided — green, gold, or day-glo — as long as it is provided, today.
But even just this Gratis OA (Libre OA is virtually zero)
is only being provided today to the tune of about 20% worldwide, and this has
been true for years now. Research usage, impact and progress are consequently
being needlessly lost for years.
Yes, every increase in OA is welcome, regardless of
its colour — but not if it comes at the
expense of preventing or delaying even greater increase in OA.
And that’s precisely what the UK’s latest turn toward
a fool’s gold rush is doing: providing a modest (though needlessly and
immoderately expensive) “increase [in] the number of research papers that are
freely available on the Internet” at the considerable expense of a far greater
increase that could be provided by adopting a sensible, scalable, cost-free
Green OA mandate for UK research, suitable for emulation by the rest of the
world.
If the UK first does the latter — clearly and
unambiguously mandates Green OA for all UK research output — then it is welcome
to throw all the cash it has to spare on also subsidizing Gold OA if it so
wishes.
But not instead.
RP: Thanks for
sharing your thoughts with me.
#####
HYBRID GOLD AND THE CHESHIRE CAT'S GRIN
Harnad
explains below why he believes publishers will seek to cash in on the new RCUK
policy by expanding hybrid OA:
Suppose you're a subscription journal. Hybrid gold
means you just keep selling subscriptions and — on top of that — you can charge
(whatever you like) extra for selling single-article hybrid gold.
How much do you charge? Well, if you publish 100
articles per year and your total annual revenue is £XXX, you charge 1% of £XXX
for hybrid Gold OA per article.
Once you've got that (plus your unaltered subscription
revenue of £XXX) you've earned £XXX + 1% for that year.
Good business.
And if the UK publishes 6% of the world's articles
yearly, then on average 6% of the articles in any journal will be paid-up
hybrid Gold OA, thanks to Finch and RCUK. That means worldwide publisher
revenue — let's say it's £XXX per year — will increase from £XXX per year to:
£XXX
+ 6% per year
Not bad.
Publishers are not too dense to do the above
arithmetic. They've already done it. That is what hybrid Gold is predicated
upon. And that is why publishers are so pleased with Finch/RCUK: “The world
purports to want OA. Fine. We’re ready to sell it to them — on top of what
we're selling them already.”
In the UK, Finch and RCUK have obligingly eliminated
hybrid Gold OA's only real competition (Green OA) — Finch by ignoring it
completely, and RCUK by forcing fundees to pay for Gold rather than provide
Green whenever the publisher has the sense to offer Gold.
Of course publishers will say (and sometimes even mean
it ) that they are not really trying to inflate their income even further. As
the uptake of hybrid Gold increases, they will proportionately lower the cost
of subscriptions — until subscriptions are gone and all that's left, like the
Cheshire Cat’s grin, is Gold OA revenue (now no longer hybrid but
"pure") — and at the same bloated levels as today's subscriptions.
So what? The goal was always OA, not Green OA or Gold
OA. Who cares if all that money is being wasted?
I don't.
I care about all the time (and with it all that OA and research progress) that has been wasted, and that will continue to be wasted, as the thrall of Gold Fever and Rights Rapture keep the research community from mandating the cost-free Green OA that would bring them 100% OA globally in next to no time, and leave them instead chasing along the CC-Byways after gold dust year upon year upon year, at unaffordable, unnecessary and unscalable cost.
I don't.
I care about all the time (and with it all that OA and research progress) that has been wasted, and that will continue to be wasted, as the thrall of Gold Fever and Rights Rapture keep the research community from mandating the cost-free Green OA that would bring them 100% OA globally in next to no time, and leave them instead chasing along the CC-Byways after gold dust year upon year upon year, at unaffordable, unnecessary and unscalable cost.
2 comments:
Oh, Stevan.
A conversation about this interview has been taking place on Google+ here.
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