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brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
Brian Hole
LSE, Open Access Futures in the Humanities and Social Sciences, 24 October 2013
Open access
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
Overview
 Why publish?
 What is open access?
 Licenses
 Publishing vs. archiving
 Benefits vs.
disadvantages
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
The Social Contract
of Science
• Validation
• Dissemination
• Further development
Scientific Malpractice
• Data
• Results
• Software
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
What is Open Access?
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
Most simply:
No barriers to access or reuse
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
By “open access” to this literature, we mean its free availability on the public
internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or
link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to
software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or
technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet
itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for
copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of
their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited.
Budapest Open Access Initiative
OA allows users to “copy, use, distribute, transmit and display the work publicly and
to make and distribute derivative works, in any digital medium for any responsible
purpose, subject to proper attribution of authorship.”
Bethsida/Berlin statements
✔ ✗ ✗
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
‘Gold open access’ (publishing)
• Publisher makes content freely available
• Content has been through peer
review, anti-plagiarism checks, etc.
• Publisher may require an article
processing charge (APC)
OA publishing vs. archiving
‘Green open access’ (archiving)
• Institution makes a pre-publication
version of content freely available in
own repository, with no charge
• Content is released early and
immediately
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
Disadvantages vs. benefits
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
• “Humanities research involves reuse of copyright material
and therefore can’t use CC-BY”
Often cited CC-BY disadvantages for the humanities
• “I don’t want my work to be translated without my oversight
and quality control”
• “Open access will increase the likelihood of plagiarism”
• “I will lose royalties if my book is available for free”
CC-BY: “You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author
or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your
use of the work).”
Fair use and fair dealing still permitted. What we really need are copyright
exceptions, and to encourage the release of more material as OA.
Attribution is still required. Plagiarism is actually easier to detect when the
source is openly available.
It’s early days for OA books, but current indications are that royalties are
stable to higher. Publishers like UP don’t aim to profit from royalties.
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
• “Open access means low quality peer review”
• “Citation metrics don’t work in the humanities”
• “Open access is too expensive for the humanities”
• “Open access is a threat to academic freedom”
• “Someone will create a derivative of my work and copyright it”
Derivatives are allowed, and if sufficiently original can also be copyright
protected. But this does not affect the copyright of the original work.
Peer review is completely independent of the distribution system. This has
not happened STM.
Why not? Use of citation metrics alone is problematic in all fields. Half-
lives are longer and therefore metrics need to be looked at in context.
Open access clearly increases freedom in very many areas. Mandates do
not have to restrict authors to certain journals only - publishers just need
to adapt.
High fees and “double dipping” need to be discouraged. APCs don’t have
to be high – many OA journals don’t charge them at all, and publishers can
be sustainable at low cost (see next slide).
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress
For more information:
Questions?
brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com
@ubiquitypress
http://www.ubiquitypress.com
http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Frequently_Asked_Questions

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Brian Hole Open Access - LSE 2013 talk

  • 1. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress Brian Hole LSE, Open Access Futures in the Humanities and Social Sciences, 24 October 2013 Open access
  • 2. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress Overview  Why publish?  What is open access?  Licenses  Publishing vs. archiving  Benefits vs. disadvantages
  • 3. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress The Social Contract of Science • Validation • Dissemination • Further development Scientific Malpractice • Data • Results • Software
  • 4. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress What is Open Access?
  • 5. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress Most simply: No barriers to access or reuse
  • 6. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress By “open access” to this literature, we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited. Budapest Open Access Initiative OA allows users to “copy, use, distribute, transmit and display the work publicly and to make and distribute derivative works, in any digital medium for any responsible purpose, subject to proper attribution of authorship.” Bethsida/Berlin statements ✔ ✗ ✗
  • 7. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress ‘Gold open access’ (publishing) • Publisher makes content freely available • Content has been through peer review, anti-plagiarism checks, etc. • Publisher may require an article processing charge (APC) OA publishing vs. archiving ‘Green open access’ (archiving) • Institution makes a pre-publication version of content freely available in own repository, with no charge • Content is released early and immediately
  • 8. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress Disadvantages vs. benefits
  • 9. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress • “Humanities research involves reuse of copyright material and therefore can’t use CC-BY” Often cited CC-BY disadvantages for the humanities • “I don’t want my work to be translated without my oversight and quality control” • “Open access will increase the likelihood of plagiarism” • “I will lose royalties if my book is available for free” CC-BY: “You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).” Fair use and fair dealing still permitted. What we really need are copyright exceptions, and to encourage the release of more material as OA. Attribution is still required. Plagiarism is actually easier to detect when the source is openly available. It’s early days for OA books, but current indications are that royalties are stable to higher. Publishers like UP don’t aim to profit from royalties.
  • 10. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress • “Open access means low quality peer review” • “Citation metrics don’t work in the humanities” • “Open access is too expensive for the humanities” • “Open access is a threat to academic freedom” • “Someone will create a derivative of my work and copyright it” Derivatives are allowed, and if sufficiently original can also be copyright protected. But this does not affect the copyright of the original work. Peer review is completely independent of the distribution system. This has not happened STM. Why not? Use of citation metrics alone is problematic in all fields. Half- lives are longer and therefore metrics need to be looked at in context. Open access clearly increases freedom in very many areas. Mandates do not have to restrict authors to certain journals only - publishers just need to adapt. High fees and “double dipping” need to be discouraged. APCs don’t have to be high – many OA journals don’t charge them at all, and publishers can be sustainable at low cost (see next slide).
  • 13. brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com www.ubiquitypress.com / @ubiquitypress For more information: Questions? brian.hole@ubiquitypress.com @ubiquitypress http://www.ubiquitypress.com http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Frequently_Asked_Questions

Editor's Notes

  • #3: NOTE about usWe are a researcher led publisher. Everything we do is to support researchers and try to improve scientific communication. Started trading last year.Have grown out of arts and humanities, but now expanding into all areas.
  • #4: This is for Stuart from the Royal Society