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Re: Definition of Open Access
OA itself is a form of access-provision, not a form of
publication. Gold OA is a form of publication.
This is a distinction without a practical difference, Stevan, and
U.S. copyright law would not differentiate between the two; both
Green OA and Gold OA would be technically defined as
"publication" under the law.
Rick is again quite right concerning those copyright transfer
agreements that explicitly state "I waive my author Fair Use
Right to send individual copies to researchers requesting my
work." But as far as I know, no publisher has ever drafted, and
no author has ever signed, such an absurd contract. (So, again,
talking about it is merely formalism, of no practical import for
the real, practical matter at hand: researchers providing free
online access to their refereed research findings for other
researchers who want to use them.)
Most journal contracts I am familiar with specify the transfer of
"all rights." Such a transfer means what it says, quite
literally, and it is entirely unnecessary therefore to include
any specific waiver of fair use rights. The very act of
transferring all rights effectively accomplishes that, and
nothing more needs to be added.
What you surely have in mind, Stevan, is the previous practice in
the print world of publishers providing offprints of articles to
their authors on publication, obviously intending for authors to
make use of those offprints by sharing them with colleagues. Once
photocopying took over, some publishers ceased the practice of
providing offprints as a needless extra expense and, at least
tacitly, allowed the practice to continue of authors making
(photo)copies of their articles for this same purpose. Now Stevan
just assumes that the same practice naturally continues into the
purely digital age, and I won't deny that many, probably even
all, publishers accept this kind of copying as legitimate and
don't intend to try preventing it. It is still not true, however,
that the author retains any fair use right once an "all rights"
transfer is effected. No such right exists, and only what the
contract allows, or the publisher otherwise permits, makes the
practice legitimate. That is the point Rick and I are trying to
make, I believe.
--
Sanford G. Thatcher
Director, Penn State Press
University Park, PA 16802-1003