OA's Three Bogeymen

From: Richard Poynder <richard.poynder_at_BTINTERNET.COM>
Date: Tue, 16 Feb 2010 11:59:13 -0500

I am inclined to agree with Keith. However, it needs to be acknowledged that
researchers are not always very discerning when choosing a publisher. I have had
some say to me, “In an ideal world I would not opt to pay to publish with this
or that particular publisher, but I need to get my work published urgently, so I
am just going to bite the bullet.”

For that reason some OA publishers seem quite content not to be part of the
OASPA community, and happy to operate by their own rules -- in the knowledge
that there is a ready market for their services. So while one might argue that
the research community can afford to ignore these companies and simply carry on
using subscription publishers and Green OA, in the hope that the market will
somehow create an optimal OA publishing ecosystem, I am less confident.

 

 

From: American Scientist Open Access Forum
[mailto:AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUM_at_LISTSERVER.SIGMAXI.ORG] On Behalf
Of keith.jeffery_at_STFC.AC.UK
Sent: 16 February 2010 12:00
To: AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUM_at_LISTSERVER.SIGMAXI.ORG
Subject: Interview with Open Access publisher In-Tech/Sciy

 

 

All -
Richard Poynder recently suggested that there were three bogeymen haunting the
OA movement: (1) asking authors to pay to publish could turn scholarly
publishing into a vanity press; (2) OA publishing will in any case inevitably
lead to lax or even non-existent peer review; (3) OA publishing is not
financially sustainable.
http://poynder.blogspot.com/2010/02/oa-interviews-sciyo-aleksandar-lazinica.htm
l

In my opinion…..

There is already evidence of (1) with various publishers trying to scam payment
for publishing (fortunately very few cases to date).

As a consequence of (1), (2) inevitably happens - but hopefully only in the case
of a small number of so-called journals.

It may be that (3) is true; with all information to date indicating gold OA
costs 3 to 4 times more than current subscription models (the figure of 3 comes
from our own estimates at STFC, 4 comes from the recent posting on AMSCI
concerning the ACM article).

But of course if current subscription models (maintaining peer review) are
backed up by green OA via IRs then everyone has the benefit of OA at a much
reduced cost.

In my opinion, the answer for academics - especially in these days of financial
stringency - is to keep with the subscription model and go green OA and let
future scholarship ecosystems develop.

Happy to discuss further...
Keith

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Prof Keith G Jeffery   E: keith.jeffery_at_stfc.ac.uk
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Received on Tue Feb 16 2010 - 18:43:58 GMT

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