UK Bids for Olympic Gold OA

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-07-18

Summary:

“‘OA was always going to be a marathon, but we seem to be waiting for a very long time indeed for any of the national runners to enter the stadium…. ‘Two Brains’ Willetts, the UK  Minister for Precocious Intelligence in the Department of Obfuscation and Reduced Expenditure, is first to arrive through the gates and begin the last round of the track. And, my goodness, how he is going… Dame Janet Finch, his trainer, is fanning his face with a White Paper as he turns for home… the games have not yet even begun and already the Brits have their hands on Gold!’ And it is a great day for British publishing as well. Clearly the three publisher members of the Finch Working Group worked their advocacy socks off, and as a result we have a conclusion embedded in today’s announcement that is as favourable to journal publishing interests as any that could be contrived. The Minister has his obligatory cost-saving (£50m), the publishers get their APCs – fees for publishing OA articles (1% of science funding, which is £4.6 bn), the academics get Open Access ... Britain beats the US and the EU to the punch and sets a precedent they may have to follow... Before we join in with the celebrations lets just go back over the interests checklist and see how this announcement affects the longer term perspective: [1] Academics ...  Will this announcement mollify the 12000 who signed the petition against Elsevier? Some but not all would seem to be the answer. Judging from the blogs so far some scientists have started to complain that the government will give their work away for free (send for Dr Harnad to attend this sick man’s bedside!). Others will be pleased to see a principle acknowledged, even if it is 2014 before the results appear. For many, I suspect, the feeling will be like seeing a banker resign or give up a bonus – the protest was not against the act of banking or publishing but against some bankers or publishers perceived to have gone too far... [2] Librarians...  This is a further step in the long term marginalization of librarians in their traditional roles. But now it is really clear that librarians and their skills base are urgently needed in repository development, research and evidential database availability and institutional self-publishing, this will only hasten a process already well underway. [3] Publishers ... Peer review as administered by them and paid for by government remains in their control... the revenue base of STM publishing will not suffer grievous harm. However, margins will suffer more ... This in turn will have an effect upon the ability to finance new developments at a time of critical change for the whole industry. The real sufferers here will be the scholarly society publishers... Migrating the business away from sole reliance on the journal never seemed a more sensible strategy. The research article ... is undergoing a process of devaluation. Where a research programme is of vital significance to a whole sector, scholarly communication via blogs, conference proceedings, posters etc will have lit up the track already and scientists do not have to wait ...to read the findings ... much current use of articles is about researching experimental technique, not outcomes. Some researchers have claimed that over 70% of enquiries are about good or best practice in experiment set-up... The highest figure that I have heard  for current open access publishing as offered by all major publishers is that it accounts for some 7% of articles published, and has taken 5 years to get there. Judging from the tepid enthusiasm of academics, my guess is that we shall top out at around 15%, by which time the major players will have done a great deal of consolidation in a slowly contracting journals market, and commoditization of the article through casual re-use will be a greater perceived threat, and diversification into workflow using all of the publishing skills base to maintain knowledge systems (ontologies) across communities so that everything relevant can be found and injected into the research process  will be deeply entrenched.  Everything about STM will change – and in ten years we shall wonder what all the Open Access fuss was about, apart from gaining a political point for the present UK government and playing the publishers back onside again.”

Link:

http://www.davidworlock.com/2012/07/uk-bids-for-olympic-gold-oa/

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.gold oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.policies oa.comment oa.government oa.green oa.universities oa.signatures oa.petitions oa.boycotts oa.elsevier oa.libraries oa.plos oa.peer_review oa.uk oa.costs oa.librarians oa.prices oa.funders oa.fees oa.wellcome oa.profits oa.recommendations oa.budgets oa.finch_report oa.repositories oa.hei oa.journals

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

07/18/2012, 22:02

Date published:

07/18/2012, 23:09