Sale to Elsevier Casts Doubt on Mendeley's Openness - Research - The Chronicle of Higher Education

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-04-11

Summary:

"For months rumors have been circulating that the publishing giant Elsevier was going to acquire Mendeley, the popular reference-management and PDF-organizer platform. Now both companies have confirmed that the rumors are true: Elsevier has bought Mendeley for an undisclosed sum. The Financial Times reported that the purchase price was £45-million (about $69-million), but neither company would confirm that. Both companies said combining forces and integrating platforms would allow them to serve scholarly users better. 'Good things are about to happen!' was the headline on the Mendeley blog post announcing the move. (The publisher went with a more muted headline for its announcement: 'Elsevier Welcomes Mendeley.') But the news triggered dismay among some researchers concerned about what the acquisition would mean for Mendeley's commitment to openness. Some of its 2.3 million users said on Twitter that they were going to delete their Mendeley accounts (many used the hashtag #mendelete) or that they were considering alternative services, such as Zotero, run by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University. Victor Henning, chief executive and co-founder of Mendeley, said in an interview that joining forces with Elsevier would make it possible for Mendeley to do several things it has wanted to do. First is to make it easier for users to actually view content. One big item on the agenda is to integrate Mendeley with Elsevier's Scopus bibliographic database and the ScienceDirect repository of more than 11 million journal articles. 'The goal is to make it completely seamless,' Mr. Henning said.  Second, merging into Elsevier will put more resources at Mendeley's disposal. What that means is 'we can take the long perspective again,' without having to figure out how to pay for each new iteration or feature, Mr. Henning said. For instance, Mendeley will be hiring a team of developers immediately to come up with a mobile version for Android phones.  'Third is the new stuff we can do now,' Mr. Henning said. Mendeley can use Elsevier's "amazing, structured database" to clean up and complete its perhaps messier but uniquely rich crowd-sourced data ... Both Mr. Dumon and Mr. Henning said that a shared vision had ultimately brought the two companies together. After collaborating with Elsevier on several projects, the Mendeley team realized that 'they were as obsessed as we are with plugging gaps in users' workflow,' he said.  In his Elsevier-welcomes-Mendeley blog post, Mr. Dumon explained that vision: 'We can make this combined platform the central workflow and collaboration site for authors,' he wrote. 'In addition, we will be able to provide greater access to a growing repository of user-generated content while building tools that will enable researchers to search this growing body of research more precisely.' In discussing the implications of the Elsevier acquisition, Mr. Henning emphasized both openness and business concerns. 'Does it mean we will stop being a provider of open data through our API? We can tell people that Mendeley will remain free,' he said. But Mendeley has "from the start been a business model," he added. 'All the data that's there now will remain under an open license, but if we introduce new data, we might charge for that. That's always been the case, independent of Elsevier.'  One high-profile skeptic is Jason Hoyt, co-founder of the new open-access publishing platform PeerJ. Mr. Hoyt worked for Mendeley from 2009 to 2011. In a blog post on Tuesday, he called the news 'a win for the Mendeley team' As an early employee, he still holds shares in Mendeley, he said. But he expressed doubts about what joining forces with Elsevier would mean for the company's long-term values.  'In terms of mission success, however, I am uncertain if this was a win,' Mr. Hoyt wrote. 'Mendeley had become known as the darling of openness, which in my view was already closing off when I left. Selling to Elsevier sets up a new challenge to maintain that open ethos, and unfortunately we can't immediately gauge what the outcome will look like.'  In his post, Mr. Hoyt detailed three projects he'd been involved in at Mendeley that he said ran into resistance from Elsevier ..."

Link:

http://chronicle.com/article/In-Sale-to-Elsevier-Mendeley/138449/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.licensing oa.comment oa.elsevier oa.copyright oa.social_media oa.twitter oa.apis oa.blogs oa.zotero oa.peerj oa.libre

Date tagged:

04/11/2013, 15:21

Date published:

04/11/2013, 11:21