In Praise of “Double-Dipping” — Fairness, Affordability, Vitality, and Sustainability « The Scholarly Kitchen
abernard102@gmail.com 2013-01-30
Summary:
One of the ideas that has been relatively unexamined pertaining to the purchasing and pricing of scholarly content is the notion that publishers should no longer engage in 'double-dipping' — that is, charge once for something, not twice, and never again. This is stated especially as regards open access (OA) articles in hybrid journals, but also is reflected in the preference some have for the CC-BY license.
SPARC Europe defines double-dipping thusly:
The term 'Double Dipping' is used because publishers receive money twice: the subs[c]riptions are still paid by the universities and authors pay for Open Access
Peter Suber has complained that double-dipping isn’t prohibited by RCUK policies regarding Gold OA, and the fact that the policy allows it:
. . . is a waste of taxpayer money and a giveaway to bad actors.
But does double-dipping really make you a 'bad actor'? Is it really a waste of money? Or is double-dipping merely what content businesses do? Does it make things affordable? Could it be that OA publishers themselves double-dip?