Who owns and controls the services that Open access depends on, both now and in 
the future, is an important question for the sustainability of open access.

To the best of my knowledge:

Figshare is owned by Nature Publishing Group which was recently acquired by 
Springer. On the surface, Springer is quite friendly to open access, however I 
consider it important to remember that in terms of subscriptions / sales 
revenue and profits Springer is second only to Elsevier. Springer in turn is 
owned by private equity companies and had been sold 4 times in little more than 
a decade.

Academia.edu is privately owned. According to Wikipedia, one of the founding 
investors, Hoberman, made a great deal of money developing something called 
last-minute.com then selling the company.

I understand that this is a common strategy or trend in Information technology, 
developing a startup then selling the company.

I do not think it wise for OA to rely on such services. We need services such 
as institutional and disciplinary archives and Journal hosting services and 
high quality indexing services that are owned and controlled by the public 
(perhaps with help from stable committed not-for-profits).

best,

Heather Morrison
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