[GOAL] Re: Elsevier is taking down papers from Academia.edu
Wise, Alicia (ELS-OXF)
A.Wise at elsevier.com
Sun Dec 8 15:52:40 GMT 2013
Hi Jeroen,
These articles can of course be used without any restriction other than the attribution required by the CC-BY license. With kind wishes,
Alicia
Dr Alicia Wise
Director of Access and Policy
Elsevier I The Boulevard I Langford Lane I Kidlington I Oxford I OX5 1GB
M: +44 (0) 7823 536 826 I E: a.wise at elsevier.com<mailto:a.wise at elsevier.com>
Twitter: @wisealic
From: goal-bounces at eprints.org [mailto:goal-bounces at eprints.org] On Behalf Of Bosman, J.M.
Sent: Sunday, December 08, 2013 9:56 AM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Elsevier is taking down papers from Academia.edu
Heather,
That would be new for me. Do you mean to say that Gold OA articles from Elsevier with a CC-BY license can not be shared without restriction? The exclusive license you mention is not in the fine print here:http://www.elsevier.com/journal-authors/open-access/open-access-policies/oa-license-policy/user-licenses
Jeroen Bosman
Op 7 dec. 2013 om 22:58 heeft "Heather Morrison" <Heather.Morrison at uottawa.ca<mailto:Heather.Morrison at uottawa.ca>> het volgende geschreven:
I argue that the problem here is not green open access. It's Elsevier. Even their version of CC-BY (with exclusive license to publish) does not resolve this problem. This is one of the reasons I am participating in the Elsevier boycott and encourage all scholars to join me (google The Cost of Knowledge).
My two bits,
Heather Morrison
On Dec 7, 2013, at 8:07 AM, "Bosman, J.M." <j.bosman at uu.nl<mailto:j.bosman at uu.nl>> wrote:
Peter,
This is not about where authors may self archive their papers, but about the version they archive. Academia (and Researchgate, and personal sites) have thousands of published versions archived by the authors. That is against most publishers' policies. Cambridge University Press is a good exception allowing archiving of the publishers' version after an embargo period..
Elsevier has always been issuing takedown notices, but not at this scale and mostly not against their own authors. In that sense this is new and a sign that Elsevier wants to fight the very idea that outcomes of science should circulate freely.
Strictly juridically speaking Elsevier is just asserting copyright of course. But I hope it will be another wake up call for authors with the effect that they start to massively share their last author versions through their institutional repositories and other routes. And of course they can publish in reasonably priced full OA journals.
Jeroen Bosman
Utrecht University Library
Op 7 dec. 2013 om 08:20 heeft "Richard Poynder" <ricky at richardpoynder.co.uk<mailto:ricky at richardpoynder.co.uk>> het volgende geschreven:
List members can also refer to the following article in The Chronicle of Higher Education, which includes comments from the founder and CEO of Academia.edu<http://Academia.edu> Richard Price, and from Elsevier:
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/posting-your-latest-article-you-might-have-to-take-it-down/48865
Elsevier has also posted a statement on the matter here:
http://www.elsevier.com/connect/a-comment-on-takedown-notices
From: goal-bounces at eprints.org<mailto:goal-bounces at eprints.org> [mailto:goal-bounces at eprints.org] On Behalf Of Peter Murray-Rust
Sent: 07 December 2013 05:04
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Cc: jisc-repositories; ASIS&T Special Interest Group on Metrics
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Elsevier Study Commissioned by UK BIS
List members may be aware that Elsevier sent out thousands of take-down notices for Green OA yesterday. See http://svpow.com/2013/12/06/elsevier-is-taking-down-papers-from-academia-edu/ and much twitter discussion.
These manuscripts are Green. They are self archived by authors after publication.
But this is forbidden by Elsevier - the manuscripts can only be posted in an Institutional Repository (and then, I assume, only if there is no mandate requiring deposition).
This is lunacy and it's to the discredit of the academics that they play this convoluted and sterile game created by the publishers. Publishers' reason for insisting on IRs over Academia.edu<http://Academia.edu> is that readers actually use Academia.
The purpose of the BOAI declaration was to make scholarship available to everyone. This farce makes scholarship available to almost no-one.
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