Is the future of scientific publishing in-house open access? | The Scinder

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-04-06

Summary:

"Those of you that frequent theScinder know that I am pretty passionate about how science is disseminated, and you have probably noticed that, like their brethren in newsprint and magazine before them, the big-name publishers don’t know exactly how to react to a changing future, and despite what traditional publishers would have you believe, they are not immune to publishing tripe. Nature may be butting heads with Duke University over requesting waivers for the open access policy in place there. Apparently the waiver request isn’t even necessarily based on the practical implementation of Duke’s open access policy (Nature allows articles to be made freely available in their final version 6 months after publication), but it does raise the question: how much hassle will universities and their faculty put up with before they take matters into their own hands? As MIT’s Samuel Gershman points out, modern publishing doesn’t cost all that much. Even the fairly exorbitant fees charged to authors by the 'gold standard' of open access publishers may be a transient relic of the conventional (turning archaic?) publishing business model. This provides incentive for predatory publishing (as discussed in this article at The Scientist and the basis for the Bohannon article published in Science last October) But if peer review and editing is largely volunteer labour, performed as an essential component of the role of a researcher and with the bill largely footed as a public expenditure, why keep paying enormous subscription fees for traditional publishing? If the trend catches on, as it almost certainly will, leading institutions will continue to adopt open access policies and libraries will see less and less reason to keep paying for outdated subscriptions."

Link:

http://thescinder.com/2014/03/30/is-the-future-of-scientific-publishing-in-house-open-access/?utm_content=buffer3044d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.npg oa.publishers oa.copyright oa.licensing oa.duke.u oa.mandates oa.predatory oa.credibility oa.quality oa.green oa.repositories oa.libre oa.policies

Date tagged:

04/06/2014, 08:10

Date published:

04/06/2014, 04:10