Is Elsevier really for-science? Or just for-profit? | Information Culture, Scientific American Blog Network

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-12-14

Summary:

"That’s the question researchers are asking after Elsevier’s latest PR debacle. It’s generally not a good idea to piss off the people who give you their time, effort and intellectual property for free. Especially if your high profit margin relies on this free content and labor. Last week, giant for-profit scholarly publisher Elsevier issued thousands of takedown notices to researchers who posted copies of their articles (published in Elsevier journals) on the academic social network Academia.edu. While Elsevier was completely within their rights to do so (they own the copyright to those articles, after all), it may not have been the wisest move, and exposes clear philosophical differences between the researchers (who want to advance and share scientific knowledge) and the publisher (who wants to make money) Researchers who posted copies of their articles to Academia.edu probably didn’t know what rights they signed away when they signed a copyright transfer agreement upon publishing. At my institution, 55% of faculty acknowledged that they didn’t know what rights they still had to their content. While Elsevier may legally own the copyright to the affected articles, this doesn’t seem quite right to most researchers. At a visceral level, they feel that the work is theirs. After all, it was their time, effort, tears and curiosity that made the discoveries in the first place. It makes sense that these researchers want to share their work with others. But they don’t have the legal right to do so. Elsevier now owns their work. Elsevier has been pissing off librarians for years, but researchers – the folks who give Elsevier their manuscripts and provide peer review services all for free – have generally been quite happy with Elsevier. They publish high quality content and researchers have been content to turn over the copyright of their work in exchange for the reputation points received for publishing in Elsevier’s journals. This stellar reputation is quickly changing. Scholars are becoming more aware of the high subscription costs Elsevier charges and the high profit margins it earns on the free content and labor supplied by those researchers. In early 2012, an online petition was started asking researchers to pledge not to write, review or edit for Elsevier journals. It currently has over 14,000 signatories, and the take-down notices have sparked a recent increase in the number of signees. Around the same time, an investment report (Elsevier is a public, for-profit company, remember), noted the challenges Elsevier was facing with its customers. The report suggested that Elsevier needs to make sure they don’t anger the academic community even more ..."

Link:

http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/information-culture/2013/12/12/is-elsevier-really-for-science-or-just-for-profit/

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.policies oa.licensing oa.comment oa.advocacy oa.signatures oa.petitions oa.boycotts oa.elsevier oa.copyright oa.academia.edu oa.versions oa.cost_of_knowledge oa.takedowns oa.libre

Date tagged:

12/14/2013, 07:21

Date published:

12/14/2013, 02:21