On 2012-10-10, at 10:05 AM, David Prosser wrote:

Unless you believe that private companies should not be allowed to run 
scholarly publishing services (a position I don't hold) then I don't see any 
implications.  I guess any new owner may feel that the OA business is not 
profitable enough, in which case they will either a) put prices up and risk 
pricing themselves out of the market, b) lower costs and risk losing out to 
competitors who provide better services or c) exit the OA journal publishing 
busy entirely.  In any case, all the papers that Springer has already published 
OA will remain OA.

Re:     "all the papers that Springer has already published OA will remain OA". 

Question: please explain on what basis you make this assertion. Any papers that 
Springer has published under CC-BY licenses place no obligation whatsoever on 
the Licensor (Springer) or a successor.

Comment on the ideological question: my perspective is that scholarly 
publishing services should be designed and led by scholars, for scholars and 
for the public interest. Private companies can and do play a useful role in 
providing such services. However, when large portions of the scholarly 
literature are owned and/or controlled by private interests, this is 
problematic.

best,

Heather Morrison, MLIS
Doctoral Candidate, Simon Fraser University School of Communication
http://pages.cmns.sfu.ca/heather-morrison/
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com





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