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Re: Science Commons, SPARC Announce New Tools for Scholarly Publishing
I can't speak for other publishers, Joe, but I can say that, at
least for Penn State, the revenue stream Project Muse produces is
quite sufficient to keep our journals afloat. Maybe we have lower
overhead than some of our peers.... :)
Sandy,
We agree on your comments about the implications of the author's
addendum, but I don't think this is the worst of Project Muse's
problems.
Muse is an artifact of a transitional era, a period when income
was primarily derived from hardcopy subscriptions; anything that
came from electronics was additive. When the electronic revenue
stream is the primary one, or when it is the sole one, as
increasingly is the case, then Muse is not likely to provide
enough income to its constituent journals to keep them all
afloat. The problem is simply that Muse doesn't cost enough;
thus the sums it sends back to its publishers are inadequate to
pay the bills. We have already seen some defections from Muse
on this account, and we can expect to see more. Muse's problems
are despite the fact that Muse has been an outstanding service
for the library community. This does not mean that Muse is
helpless or that innovative management can't develop a new
strategy (yes, there are such strategies), but that even without
having to wrestle with the author's addendum, Muse has a
difficult road ahead.
For anyone who wishes to challenge this point of view, please
see Susan Skomal's post to this list a while back concerning
BioOne ("For titles with very large and stable traditional
subscription sales, however, BioOne may not be an appropriate
choice":
http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0702/msg00068.html).
Skomal's post addressed a slightly different problem, but the
general issue is the same. I am not suggesting that Skomal
endorses my point of view.
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: <sgt3@psu.edu>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 8:00 PM
Subject: Re: Science Commons, SPARC Announce New Tools for Scholarly
Publishing
First I will beg the indulgence of the moderator of this list
and its readers to accept a flurry of postings from me. I have
dutifully downloaded the postings for the past six weeks but
had such a busy schedule that I have had to postpone to this
weekend responding to any. So here I begin....
I have a simple question to ask those who stand behind and
support this initiative (and others similar to it, like the one
proposed by the CIC provosts): how does it help universities
that pay for their presses to publish journals to create a lot
of extra work for their staffs explaining to authors why they
cannot accept all of the proposed clauses in the addendum? This
is a real cost, which will add to the burden of already
understaffed university presses (like mine).
A university press (like mine) that relies for a very
substantial part of its journal income from participation in
Project Muse simply cannot afford to sign an agreement that
would have the effect of undermining Project Muse. A clause
that allows authors, or others, to post on the open Internet
the final peer-reviewed and copyedited version of their
articles, with or without a six-month delay, is very likely to
lead eventually to the demise of Muse-which, may I remind you
all, was established with the support of a Mellon grant jointly
to the press and library at Johns Hopkins and was developed
from the beginning to be a library-friendly, reasonably priced
resource.
If Muse disappears, then so too do all of the ten journals that
we currently publish and have enrolled in Muse, including such
long-established leading journals in their fields as Philosophy
& Rhetoric, The Chaucer Review, and Comparative Literature
Studies and such newer journals as Book History (the official
journal of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading,
and Publishing). It has long since passed the time when their
print subscriptions alone could sustain the cost of publishing
them.
I am also curious as to the legality of this further strategy
proposed by SPARC and adopted by the University of Wisconsin
Faculty Senate on May 7 when it approved the CIC initiative:
The Library Committee amended the original CIC addendum
distributed by the CIC provosts to include subsection 4 that
was derived from ARL's Scholarly Publishing and Academic
Resources Coalition (SPARC). ARL/SPARC has been an
international leader in the discussion of author rights and
scholarly communications. This sub-section is a default clause
that states that in the event that the publisher publishes the
article in the journal without signing a copy of the addendum,
the publisher will be deemed to have assented to the terms of
the addendum.
Not being a lawyer, I'm no expert on the validity of such
"default" clauses, but I would bet that they are unenforceable.
A license is a license, and if the publisher does not agree to
terms explicitly in writing, no "default" is going to compel
the publisher to do anything it doesn't want to do. Other
opinions, please?
As for the general approach of Creative Commons (copied in this
Science Commons version) to provide a means for authors to
license any uses that are "noncommercial," I would appreciate
knowing what "noncommercial" means. If it is meant to be the
equivalent of "educational," then it is as vacuous and
unhelpful as the view that "fair use" sanctions any
"educational" use-which, as we all know from a variety of
Supreme Court cases, is not the view of the highest court in
the land. For the vast majority of the specialized scholarly
writing that is the subject of journal licensing agreements,
there is NO market outside of higher education-which is, by the
way, the reason that university presses were established in the
first place. Is "noncommercial" then supposed to be a synonym
for "nonprofit"? But university presses are nonprofit entities.
Thus, are we permitted by Creative Commons licenses to
republish any articles or book chapters whose authors have
signed such a license? It would be nice to know so that we
don't have to bother paying them any permission fees. The same,
of course, would hold for "nonprofit" society publishers. Our
missions are, of course, to serve scholarship, so we would be
happy to accept this interpretation of "noncommercial." I'm not
sure its creators intended for it to be interpreted in that
way. On the other hand, I really haven't a clue about how they
did intend it to be construed, since it is inherently a
slippery concept. And the whole edifice of CC licensing is
built upon this shaky commercial/noncommercial distinction, is
it not?
As in much else that is going on now, every step forward in one
arena seems to entail a step backward in another. If
universities were thinking systematically about this issue
instead of narrowly focusing on the STM journal problem, they
would realize that proposals like these are at least partly
self-defeating.
Sandy Thatcher
Penn State Press