Where open access has failed to reform academic publishing, perhaps antitrust law will succeed – Walled Culture

Hanna_S's bookmarks 2024-10-02

Summary:

"The open access movement has been trying for over 20 years to promote the widest access to knowledge. Sadly, as numerous Walled Culture posts have chronicled, what should be a matter of social justice has been subverted by clever and cynical moves from the academic publishing industry in order to retain their fabulous profit margins. As a result, the open access movement has failed to deliver cost-free access to academic papers, or to ease the process of sharing knowledge, at least on the scale that it initially aimed for. That makes a completely different approach to tackling the problems of academic publishing, using US antitrust laws, extremely interesting..."

Link:

https://walledculture.org/where-open-access-has-failed-to-reform-academic-publishing-perhaps-antitrust-law-will-succeed/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Hanna_S's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.publishing oa.publishers oa.fees oa.elsevier oa.wiley oa.sage oa.wolters_kluwer oa.taylor&francis oa.springer_nature oa.usa oa.litigation oa.monopoly

Date tagged:

10/02/2024, 09:48

Date published:

10/02/2024, 05:48