Is piracy of journals wrong? | Laboratory News

abernard102@gmail.com 2016-03-08

Summary:

" ... What about knowledge? What about truly valuable stuff like facts and information and insight? Can that be – should that be – subject to copyright? It’s a long-running issue in scientific circles, and one that has been aired here before – how can it be right to charge for access to knowledge? Research is conducted, often at taxpayers’ expense, and the knowledge gained is distilled, written-up, distributed for peer review, returned, amended, delivered to a publisher, and… locked away from those unable to cough up a few doubloons. Conventional scientific publishing involves the authors and reviewers doing a lot of work for free and then handing it over journals, where it is held to ransom. The treasure chest of knowledge is accessible to anybody, as long as they can pay. There is a buccaneering alternative, growing in popularity and seen by some as the way forward. Open access involves much the same process as traditional publishing, but makes finished papers freely available on the internet to anybody that wants to read them. And why not? The notion of ring-fencing knowledge to the select few was popular with pre-enlightenment religion and has no place in modern society.  The problem is that the process still needs to be financed. With open source, the burden is shifted from the reader to the writer, meaning that researchers have to find the resources to pay the publisher. Follow the booty trail upstream, and the poor old taxpayer is still footing the bill. Between these two camps, a third and properly piratical movement is gaining ground. Just as with music and movies, there is a growing habit in some circles of simply stealing whatever papers are wanted ... So far, so simple, but Sci-Hub is more than just a gateway to a repository of pirated content. If it finds that a paper is absent from LibGen, it goes straight to the source at a mainstream publisher. Using a number of access keys provided by sympathetic academics with subscriptions, it raids the vaults at Elsevier, Sage, JStor, Springer, or wherever, and delivers the paper direct to the requester. It then lodges a copy at LibGen for good measure. In many ways, this is simply automating an informal process of swapping papers that has been going on ever since emails could deliver attachments. It also seems transparently illegal and indefensible. Is there really any moral difference between ripping off a copy of the Arctic Monkeys’ latest album and stealing a copy of the latest issue of the Journal of Chromatography (annual sub a snip at a little over €20,000)? Is it different from strolling into a High Street shop and slipping a magazine or CD into your pocket? Well, yes it is. Of course it is. It has to be. We’re talking about the growing sum of human knowledge, not some catchy tune that turns into an earworm. To hold scientific papers back from poorer researchers simply because it suits the big publishers to continue to make fat profits is as immoral as insisting that books can only be written in Latin in order to keep the plebs in their place ..."

Link:

http://www.labnews.co.uk/comment/piracy-journals-wrong-07-03-2016/

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.sci-hub oa.piracy oa.debates oa.guerrilla

Date tagged:

03/08/2016, 08:57

Date published:

03/08/2016, 03:57