Penalizing an institution's *authors* for publishing their own articles in
subscription journals will not help that institution's *users* gain access
to the subscription journal articles of authors *from all other
institutions*, hence it will not reduce the institution's subscription
budget, just increase the total institutional spend by the author spend.
(Hence Jan's is yet another unstable, unscalable solution, the only stable,
coherent one being for all authors, at all institutions, to be
mandated to provide
Green OA
<http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2014/04/28/inflated-subscriptions-unsustainable-harnad/>
.)

To assess the effectiveness of the University of Zürich
<http://roarmap.eprints.org/329/> Green OA mandate (which has only one of
the two conditions <http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/370203/> for the most effective
mandates <http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/375854/>: immediate deposit is
required, but deposit is not a precondition for research evaluation) what
needs to be counted is not the annual proportion of OA deposits but the
annual proportion of immediate-deposits -- because Zora
<https://www.zora.uzh.ch> implements the automated Request-a-Copy Button
<http://www.zora.uzh.ch/117835/> to provide Almost-OA
<https://www.google.ca/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=MUCJVraTOuiM8Qf8hrn4Cw&gws_rd=ssl#q=button+%22almost-OA%22>
for embargoed deposits.

Once (effective) immediate-deposit mandates are universal (or
almost-universal), it will be universal (or almost-universal) Green OA plus
Almost-OA that will make journal subscriptions cancellable at last, thereby
not only forcing the publisher downsizing, cost-cutting and conversion
to Fair-Gold
OA
<https://www.google.ca/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=MUCJVraTOuiM8Qf8hrn4Cw&gws_rd=ssl#q=harnad+%22fair+gold%22>,
but also providing institutions and their authors with the windfall
subscription cancelation savings out of which to pay the small remaining
fair-gold costs (i.e., just peer review alone) many times over.

A "flip
<https://www.google.ca/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=MUCJVraTOuiM8Qf8hrn4Cw&gws_rd=ssl#q=harnad+flip+OA>"
to today's Fools-Gold, even if it had been possible (which it is not) would
simply have flipped today's grotesquely inflated total expenditure from
subscription fees to publication fees (before it all flopped the very next
day).

(But I have reconciled myself to merely keep pointing the way to the
optimal and inevitable outcome without fretting about how long it will take
the research community to do the only sensible thing.)

Your Zen Archivangelist

On Sun, Jan 3, 2016 at 8:27 AM, Velterop <velte...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I have advocated this for a while now (but am not aware of any university
> or library that's taken it up):
> Charge authors of your university who insist on publishing in a
> subscription journal either
>
>    - a nominal amount that is based on an estimate of the average
>    per-article revenue of subscription journals/publishers (about $5000), or
>    - the actual subscription amount paid by the university to a
>    publisher, divided by the number of articles by authors from the
>    university, published in the journals of that publisher.
>
> These charges should be collected from the authors' grants, be put in an
> open access fund, and then be used by the university/library to support
> authors willing to publish in APC-supported open access journals.
>
> (For those who really don't like the 'gold' strategy and favour the
> 'green' one above all: you could use the open access fund to defray the
> cost of your open repositories and of all the effort needed to ensure that
> every single paper from your university or institution is properly and
> 'findably' deposited.)
>
> There will no-doubt be practical difficulties with this, but perhaps it
> can be considered as the seed of an approach?
>
> Jan Velterop
>
> On 03/01/2016 12:39, Christian Gutknecht wrote:
>
> Well, I think Thomas is right. As long libraries do not shift money from
> the subscription side to the Gold OA side, the transformation will be very
> very slow.
>
> Take the University of Zurich for example. I’ve just disclosed for the
> first time ever what they are paying for Elsevier, Springer and Wiley and
> put that in relation with the institutional publication behavior in this
> blog post:
> <http://wisspub.net/2016/01/03/zahlungen-der-universitaet-zuerich/>
> http://wisspub.net/2016/01/03/zahlungen-der-universitaet-zuerich/
>
> The University of Zurich has a strong mandate since 2008 with probably one
> of the best staffed OA team (7 persons) in Europe. But regarding
> publications from 2014, only 23% (242 out of 1062) from all articles
> published articles within journals from Elsevier, Wiley and Springer
> Journals are freely accessible via the IR. In 2014 too, the University of
> Zurich paid 3.4 Mio CHF/USD to Elsevier, Springer and Wiley only for
> Journal subscriptions.
>
> The situation becomes even more absurd, when you learn that in 2014 there
> were 176 publications authored by the University of Zurich that were
> published by PLOS (which by the way already is the half of what the
> University of Zurich publishes with Wiley!). But there is only little
> institutional funding for APCs explicitly limited to humanities. So all
> authors who wish publish with PLOS have to throw in additional money by
> their own research budget, because the library claims to have no additional
> money for large scale Gold OA funding. Fortunately for the sake of OA,
> Swiss authors are willing to pay with the own budget that because the
> financial situation isn’t that bad. But think about the chance and the
> boost for OA, if the University of Zurich would shift all or at least a
> part of the money from the journal subscriptions and create a publisher
> neutral Open Access funds.
>
> So I think we can and should promote more Green OA and care about a better
> compliance. But if we really want to speed up the transition to Gold OA we
> really should consider to give the subscription money a new purpose and use
> it in a coordinated way to force the publishers to change their business
> model. And as I heard this was Berlin 12 about.
>
> Best regards
>
> Christian Gutknecht
>
>
>
>
>
> Am 31.12.2015 um 19:15 schrieb Stevan Harnad <har...@ecs.soton.ac.uk>:
>
>
> On Dec 31, 2015, at 10:59 AM, Thomas Krichel <kric...@openlib.org> wrote:
>
>  Stevan Harnad writes
>
> 1. Actually, no one really knows why it is taking so long to reach the
> optimal and inevitable outcome -- universal OA --
>
>
>  oh I know. It's because libraries are spending money on subscriptions.
>  And as long as they do, OA remains evitable.
>
>
> That’s about as useful as saying that "I know why there is poverty:
> because the rich are rich and the poor are poor."
>
> Not only is it not possible to treat “libraries” as if they were a monolith
> any more than it is possible to treat “authors” as a monolith,
> but it is completely out of the question for a university library
> to cancel subscriptions while its users have no other means to
> access that content.
>
> (Please don’t reply that they do cancel what they cannot afford: that is
> not relevant. Libraries subscribe to as much content that their users need
> as they can afford to subscribe to.)
>
> The only way to make subscriptions cancellable is to first mandate
> and provide (universal — not just local) Green OA
> <http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2014/04/28/inflated-subscriptions-unsustainable-harnad/>
> .
>
> SH
>
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