There is nothing in any of the CC licenses that requires that works be made 
available free of charge, either by the downstream user or by the original 
licensor. It is true that a CC license cannot be revoked, however the catch is 
you have to have a copy of the work and proof of the license under which you 
obtained the work. There is nothing to stop the original licensor from changing 
their mind, taking down the CC-BY copy and replacing it with a work under 
whatever terms they like (or not making the work available at all).

This argument is basically that while CC-BY may appear to be highly desirable 
and reflect the BOAI definition of OA (which I now reject as the source of the 
problem), it is a weak license full of loopholes that could be the downfall of 
open access.

best,

Heather

On Apr 28, 2015, at 5:21 PM, "William Gunn" 
<william.g...@gmail.com<mailto:william.g...@gmail.com>> wrote:


On Apr 26, 2015 2:08 PM, "Heather Morrison" 
<heather.morri...@uottawa.ca<mailto:heather.morri...@uottawa.ca>> wrote:
>
> There are arguments against CC-BY as a default that apply across all 
> disciplines. The most important is the potential for downstream enclosure... 
> A broad-based CC-BY success of the open access movement could easily and 
> quickly revert to toll access on a massive scale in the future (short, medium 
> or long term).

I think I'm missing a key part of your argument. Can you explain how a CC-BY 
licensed work would revert to toll access?

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