In related news: Elsevier's toll access service Scopus now includes 5,393 open 
access journals. This is helpful to illustrate and analyze some of the 
implications of blanket downstream commercial re-use (e.g. CC-BY):

Extra profit for Elsevier: no need to pay CC-BY journals, and open licensing 
reduces their costs for clarifying permissions.

Increase in monopoly power for Elsevier: anyone can use the CC licensed 
material to create a competitor to Scopus, however only Elsevier can use their 
copyrighted work. CC-BY reduces the likelihood of successful competition.

Development of underdevelopment: authors from poor countries get the benefit of 
increased exposure with OA, but are locked out of the next generation of 
services built on this such as Scopus. CC-BY is not sufficient to achieve the 
vision of sharing the knowledge of the rich with the poor and the poor with the 
rich; this license facilitates one-way sharing of the poor with the rich, as it 
lacks a means of ensuring reciprocity. (CC-BY-SA does not ensure reciprocity 
either; it means use the same license for derivatives, not share like I have. A 
re-used OA article with CC-BY-SA can be re-used in a TA environment).

I recommend against the use of licenses allowing blanket commercial re-use to 
authors, journals, OA advocates and policy-makers.

best,

Dr. Heather Morrison
Associate Professor, School of Information Studies, University of Ottawa
Professeur Agrégé, École des Sciences de l'Information, Université d'Ottawa
Principal Investigator, Sustaining the Knowledge Commons, a SSHRC Insight 
Project
sustainingknowledgecommons.org
heather.morri...@uottawa.ca
https://uniweb.uottawa.ca/?lang=en#/members/706
________________________________
From: goal-boun...@eprints.org <goal-boun...@eprints.org> on behalf of Bernie 
Folan <bernie.fo...@oaspa.org>
Sent: Monday, July 8, 2019 7:01:54 AM
To: Bernie Folan
Subject: [GOAL] Results of OA article data collection from OASPA members

Attention : courriel externe | external email

***With apologies for cross posting ***

OASPA has published a new blog post summarising the results of a recent OA 
article data collection exercise carried out with input from OASPA members.

You can find the post at 
https://oaspa.org/growth-continues-for-oaspa-member-oa-content/

Some highlights:

  *   Total growth in output by OASPA members is 23%. This does include some 
new contributors but on the whole, they were small numbers so don't count much 
towards the total.
  *   Growth in CC BY articles published in fully OA journals is 18% so this is 
slightly higher than it has done for the past 5 years.
  *   Over a quarter of a million CC BY articles were published by OASPA 
members in fully OA journals last year.

Do feel free to share within your networks.

Best wishes,
Bernie


Bernie Folan
Events and Communications Coordinator, OASPA
bernie.fo...@oaspa.org<mailto:bernie.fo...@oaspa.org>
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