Friday, February 09, 2007

Flacks Hired in Controversy Over Open Content Scientific Results

Read "Research-Result Battle Now Pits PR 'Pit Bull' Against Barbie Blenders" by Rick Weiss in The Washington Post, February 9, 2007.

Advocates of "public access" to scientific information want government rules to require that the results of federally funded research be posted on the Internet within six or 12 months after they are published. Since the public has paid for the research with taxpayers money, they feel they have a right to see the results.

A coalition of scientific publishers, say such a policy would amount to a government taking of their copyrighted material and would undermine their paid subscriber base, making it impossible for them to continue the valuable public service of screening and publishing the very best science.

The Association of American Publishers has apparently hired a well known public relations specialist, Eric Dezenhall, to help make their case. Public access proponents have linked up with FreeCulture.org to help make theirs.

Comment: This would be fun to watch, were it not so dangerous. The Internet is changing the dissemination of scientific results. One hopes the changes will be for the better. That may not be the result.

I would note that scientists write up their results for journal publication without remuneration from the journals. So too do peer reviewers usually do their work without pay. The Internet distributes materials almost without cost. So what is the problem?

Publishers get a lot of money from subscriptions and advertising. They don't want to lose the revenues. On the other hand, resources are needed for aspects of the dissemination, and they have not been institutionalized. Until they are, we can't depend on systems that need the resources they will eventually generate.

But public relations types and take-no-prisoner true believers are unlikely to advance the public debate.
JAD

2 comments:

Ismael Peña-López said...

I strongly sugest Stevan Harnad's Opening Access by Overcoming Zeno's Paralysis as a sort of FAQ to OA issues and why and why not should one support OA. Enlightening. :)

John Daly said...

Looks like a good paper from the abstract. Too bad the author did not put is out on the Internet for all to read.

Check out the Open Access - Free Culture bibliography on the great ICTlogy blog.