mako: openaccess (50)

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  1. Identity management and open access.
  2. Tactically, I don't think that this is the step that graduate students should be taking, at least not yet. That said, I respect what Alex is doing.
  3. Good project by some good people.
  4. "Two recent articles call for an openness revolution in science: one on GigaOM and the other in the Wall Street Journal. But they’ve got it all wrong. These folks are missing that the process of scientific discovery is not, at its core, an open process. It only becomes an open process at the point of publication."
  5. Awesome. Not open access but, at least in the medium term, a positive way to address issues of access to the academic resources necessary to write a great encyclopedia.
  6. Awesome.
  7. The last part of this article is crap. Open Access already has a standard license and it's BY-SA. Suggesting BY-NC-ND is regressive. Academics have strong standards already against derivative works. The only market for academic publications is a bizarre artificial one that, honestly, both scholars are being exploited by. Neither NC nor ND is solving real problems. If we're going to suggest standardization, lets have it be on what we really want as opposed to what we might be able to live with.
  8. Interesting idea. I'm worried about getting too excited though since so much is up in the air. If I were this group, I would have waited until I had something to announce.
  9. Not sure why this is still not up on the libraries home page.
  10. updated: 2013-01-25, original: 2013-01-25 to , , , , - Archived Link
  11. Another paper showing a positive effect of OA publishing on impact.
  12. Wow! Awesome news.
  13. Academics have protested against Elsevier's business practices for years with little effect. These are some of their objections: They charge exorbitantly high prices for subscriptions to individual journals. In the light of these high prices, the only realistic option for many libraries is to agree to buy very large "bundles", which will include many journals that those libraries do not actually want. Elsevier thus makes huge profits by exploiting the fact that some of their journals are essential. They support measures such as SOPA, PIPA and the Research Works Act, that aim to restrict the free exchange of information. The key to all these issues is the right of authors to achieve easily-accessible distribution of their work. If you would like to declare publicly that you will not support any Elsevier journal unless they radically change how they operate, then you can do so by filling in your details on this page.
    updated: 2020-03-13, original: 2012-06-04 to , , , , - Archived Link
  14. New publishing imprint from a major publisher to use only CC works available for free on the Internet at the time of publication. Hal Abelson is on the advisory board.
  15. Awesome Egyption Open Access publisher.
  16. Mr. Malamud said his years of activism had led him to set a long-shot goal: serving in the Obama administration, perhaps even as head of the Government Printing Office. “If called, I will certainly serve,” he said. “But if not called, I will probably serve anyway.”
  17. Student Statement on The Right to Research
  18. updated: 2011-11-08, original: 2011-11-08 to , , , , , - Archived Link

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