Uh - "the distributed network of Green institutional repositories worldwide is 
not for sale"? Not so sure - the green institutional repositories can be 
replaced by other solutions, can't they ? Better solutions, more 
functionalities, more added value, more efficient, better connected to 
databases and gold/hybrid journals etc. 
----- Mail d'origine -----
De: Stevan Harnad <amscifo...@gmail.com>
À: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci) <goal@eprints.org>
Envoyé: Tue, 17 May 2016 17:03:18 +0200 (CEST)
Objet: Re: [GOAL] SSRN Sellout to Elsevier

Shame on SSRN.
Of course we know exactly why Elsevier acquired SSRN (and Mendeley):
It's to retain their stranglehold over a domain (peer-reviewed 
scholarly/scientific research publishing) in which they are no longer needed, 
and in which they would not even have been able to gain as much as a foothold 
if it had been born digital, instead of being inherited as a legacy from an 
obsolete Gutenberg era.
I don't know about Arxiv (needless centralization and its concentrated expenses 
are always vulnerabe to faux-benign take-overs) but what's sure is that the 
distributed network of Green institutional repositories worldwide  is not for 
sale, and that is their strength...
Stevan Harnad


On Tue, May 17, 2016 at 8:03 AM, Bo-Christer Björk 
<bo-christer.bj...@hanken.fi> wrote:
This is an interesting news item which should interest the
 readers of this list. Let's hope arXiv is not for sale.Bo-Christer Björk



 -------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject:
Message from Mike Jensen, SSRN ChairmanDate:Tue, 17 May 2016 07:40:29 -0400 
(EDT)From:Michael C. Jensen <ad...@ssrn.com>Reply-To:
support@ssrn.comTo:bo-christer.bj...@hanken.fi



Dear SSRN Authors,


 SSRN announced today that it has changed ownership. SSRN is
 joining Mendeley and Elsevier
 to coordinate our development and delivery of new products and
 services, and we look forward to our new access to data, products,
 and additional resources that this change facilitates. (See Gregg
 Gordon’s Elsevier
 Connect post)


 Like SSRN, Mendeley and Elsevier are focused on creating tools
 that enhance researcher workflow and productivity. SSRN has been
 at the forefront of on-line sharing of working papers. We are
 committed to continue our innovation and this change will enable
 that to happen more quickly. SSRN will benefit from access to the
 vast new data and resources available, including Mendeley’s
 reference management and personal library management tools, their
 new researcher profile capabilities, and social networking
 features. Importantly, we will also have new access for SSRN
 members to authoritative performance measurement tools such as
 those powered by Scopus and
 Newsflo
 (a global media tracking tool). In addition, SSRN, Mendeley and
 Elsevier together can cooperatively build bridges to close the
 divide between the previously separate worlds and workflows of
 working papers and published papers.


 We realize that this change may create some concerns about the
 intentions of a legacy publisher acquiring an open-access working
 paper repository. I shared this concern. But after much discussion
 about this matter and others in determining if Mendeley and
 Elsevier would be a good home for SSRN, I am convinced that they
 would be good stewards of our mission. And our copyright policies
 are not in conflict -- our policy has always been to host only
 papers that do not infringe on copyrights. I expect we will have
 some conflicts as we align our interests, but I believe those will
 be surmountable.


 Until recently I was convinced that the SSRN community was best
 served being a stand-alone entity. But in evaluating our future in
 the evolving landscape, I came to believe that SSRN would benefit
 from being more interconnected and with the resources available
 from a larger organization. For example, there is scale in systems
 administration and security, and SSRN can provide more value to
 users with access to more data and resources.


 On a personal note, it has been an honor to be involved over the
 past 25 years in the founding and growth of the SSRN website and
 the incredible community of authors, researchers and institutions
 that has made this all possible. I consider it one of my great
 accomplishments in life. The community would not have been
 successful without the commitment of so many of you who have
 contributed in so many ways. I am proud of the community we have
 created, and I invite you to continue your involvement and support
 in this effort.


 The staff at SSRN are all staying (including Gregg Gordon, CEO and
 myself), the Rochester office is still in place, it will still be
 free to upload and download papers, and we remain committed to
 “Tomorrow’s Research Today”. I look forward to and am committed to
 a successful transition and to another great 25 years for the SSRN
 community that rivals the first.


 Michael C. Jensen

Founder & Chairman, SSRN



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