Of divorce lawyers and scholarly publishers | Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week #AcademicSpring

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-05-09

Summary:

"I was reading an article recently about crowd-funded startups. One of the featured startups aims to make divorce more painless. That started me thinking about divorce lawyers. Their web-sites say they will 'guide you as painlessly as possible through the jungle of legal rules and practices' and 'have not only your best interests in mind, but also that of any children who may be involved'. And I’m sure that’s true of all the individuals that work at such firms. I’m sure they do genuinely good work and mitigate some of the appalling pain of a divorce. And yet. For these firms to succeed, they need marriages to fail. From the perspective of the company (not the people in it), a successful marriage is a missed business opportunity. What a terrible, conflicted, position to be in. It must be hard to work for a company like that. And then I thought about traditional, paywall-based scholarly publishers. Their web-sites say things like 'We have a passion for digital distribution', that they have an 'objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide', and that their purpose is 'to further the [...] objective of advancing learning, knowledge and research'. I’m sure that’s true of all the individuals that work at the company. I’m sure they do genuinely good work and want to make research available wherever possible. And yet. For those firms to succeed, they need universities, libraries, doctors, nurses, teachers and others not to be able to freely access published research. From the perspective of the company (not the people in it), a shared paper is a missed business opportunity. What a terrible, conflicted, position to be in. It must be hard to work for a company like that. – This isn’t hypothetical. The three publishers whose self-descriptions I quoted above are Taylor and Francis ('passion for digital distribution'), Oxford University Press ('education by publishing worldwide') and Cambridge University Press ('advancing learning, knowledge and research'). The very same three publishers who are currently suing Delhi University for photocopying excerpts of their textbooks. Now leave aside whether or not the law is on the publishers’ or the educators’ side in this dispute. The issue is this. The publishers’ business model forces them to act in a way directly opposed to their mission. What they are doing in Delhi, if they are successful will prevent T&F’s goal of digital distribution; it will prevent OUP’s mission of education worldwide; and it will prevent CUP’s objective of advancing learning. – When I met Alicia Wise back in September last year, and we chatted over lunch, I think she was a bit surprised at my insistence that all paywalls on research have to come down. I don’t want to put words in her mouth (and I hope she’ll correct me if I misinterpreted) but it seemed to me that she expected to be able to meet me half way — that I would be in favour, for example, of a scheme that allowed much cheaper access to paywalled material. In that chat over lunch, I don’t think I did a very good of articulating why I am so implacable on this. But this is the reason. As soon as a publisher has a paywall, its  mission and its business are in conflict. A paywall-based publisher cannot both advance its mission and preserve its revenue ..."

Link:

http://svpow.com/2013/05/08/of-divorce-lawyers-and-scholarly-publishers/

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.licensing oa.comment oa.advocacy oa.elsevier oa.copyright oa.india oa.litigation oa.prices oa.fair_use oa.profits oa.taylor&francis oa.oup oa.cup oa.u.delhi oa.libre oa.south

Date tagged:

05/09/2013, 11:49

Date published:

05/09/2013, 07:49