Thank you Heather,
These are valuable figures that show that "Open Access" does not always
bring knowledge justice.

I was involved with BMC nearly from the start - it broke new ground -
showed that "OA" could be profitable and sustainable. I was on the
Editorial Board of Journal of Cheminformatics from the start until I
resigned (on this issue) . The editors past and present are close friends
and colleagues and have been a primary force for innovation in chemistry.

But the takeover by Springer has been ultra-capitalist and an example of
knowledge neocolonialism. From where I was I saw no positive support from
Springer. The editorial board were expected to pay all their expenses
including travelling to US for a "meeting", that was inadequately supported
by Springer (no minutes were kept). Springer provided effectively no
support. They may have provided some generic support for IECs, but in my
view minimal. I addressed all these concerns and got no reply.

I guestimate (without evidence) that the "prices" are roughly
* 30% true "costs" (much larger than they should be because there is no
pressure)
* 30% corporate (branding, offices, etc.)
* 10% philanthropy (waivers)
* 30% direct to shareholders

I therefore resigned with as much publicity (not much) that I could
generate.

It is critical to realise that OA does not guarantee:
* knowledge justice
* global equality (in fact in companies like BMC it is divisive)
* innovation (commercial publishers have no incentive to innovate and this
is holding science/scholarship back massively). The lack of modern
technology means that data which should be used to validate science is
omitted or published as bitmaps. People die because of our current
publication processes.

It seems clear to me that Editorial Boards and many Editors are effectively
sidelined by megapublishers, who create tech and processes that benefit
them, not the readers or the world. The plethora of arcane publishers all
competing to create different brands effectively destroys much scientific
knowledge.

This will not be solved by COAS or similar schemes which will perpetuate
the problems above.

The immediate answers lie in
* preprints (organised by trustable organisations, not publishers)
* in a few disciplines , regulated by scholarly societies but NOT
commercial publishers
* national publications (e.g. Ameli_CA, in Latin America)
* zero price community journals e.g. J Open Source Software, J Machine
Learning Research).

This will make us (literally) a healthier world.
|





On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 5:30 PM Heather Morrison <heather.morri...@uottawa.ca>
wrote:

> BioMedCentral (BMC) 2019 – 2020
>
> *by Anqi Shi & Heather Morrison*
>
> *Key points*
>
>    - Open access commercial publishing pioneer BMC is now wholly owned by
>    a private company with a portfolio including lines of business that derive
>    revenue from journal subscriptions, book sales, and textbook sales and
>    rentals
>    - Two former BMC fully OA journals, listed in DOAJ from 2014 – 2018 as
>    having CC-BY licenses, are now hybrid and listed on the Springer website
>    and have disappeared from the BMC website
>    - 67% of BMC journals with APCs in 2019 and 2020 increased in price
>    and 11% decreased in price.
>    - Journals with price increases had a higher average APC in 2019, i.e.
>    more expensive journals appear to be more likely to increase in price
>
>
>
> *Abstract*
>
>
>
> Founded in 2000, BioMedCentral (BMC) was one of the first commercial (OA)
> publishers and a pioneer of the article processing charges (APC) business
> model. BMC was acquired by Springer in 2008. In 2015, Springer was acquired
> by the Holtzbrinck Publishing Group in 2015 and became part of
> SpringerNature. In other words, BMC began as an OA publisher and is now one
> of the imprints or business lines of a company whose other lines of
> business include sales of journal subscriptions and scholarly books and
> textbook sales and rentals. Of the 328 journals actively published by BMC
> in 2020, 91% charge APCs. The average APC was 2,271 USD, an increase of 3%
> over 2019. An overall small increase in average APC masks substantial
> changes at the individual journal level. As first noted by Wheatley (2016),
> BMC price changes from one year to the next are a mix of increases,
> decreases, and retention of the same price. In 2020, 67% of the 287
> journals for which we have pricing in USD for both 2019 and 2020 increased
> in price; 11% decreased in price, and 22% did not change price. It appears
> that it is the more expensive journals that are more likely to increase in
> price. The average 2019 price of the journals that increased in 2020 was
> 2,307 USD, 18% higher than the 2019 average of 1,948 USD for journals that
> decreased in price. 173 journals increased in price by 4% or more, well
> above the inflation rate. 39 journals increased in price by 10% or more; 13
> journals increased in price by 20% or more. Also in 2020, there are 11 new
> journals, 11 journals ceased publication, 5 titles were transferred to
> other publishers, 2 journals changed from no publication fee to having an
> APC, and 3 journals dropped their APCs. Two journals formerly published
> fully OA by BMC are no longer listed on the BMC website, but are now listed
> as hybrid on the Springer website. This is a small portion of the total but
> is worth noting as the opposite direction of the transformative (from
> subscriptions to OA) officially embraced by SpringerNature.
>
> For links to the full PDF and data:
>
> https://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/2020/06/08/biomedcentral-2020/
>
>
> Cite as: Shi, A. & Morrison, H. (2020). BioMedCentral 2020. *Sustaining
> the Knowledge Commons*.
> https://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/2020/06/08/biomedcentral-2020/
>
> Dr. Heather Morrison
>
> Associate Professor, School of Information Studies, University of Ottawa
>
> Cross-appointed, Department of Communication
>
> 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
>
> [On research sabbatical July 1, 2019 - June 30, 2020]
> _______________________________________________
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>


-- 
"I always retain copyright in my papers, and nothing in any contract I sign
with any publisher will override that fact. You should do the same".

Peter Murray-Rust
Reader Emeritus in Molecular Informatics
Unilever Centre, Dept. Of Chemistry
University of Cambridge
CB2 1EW, UK
+44-1223-763069
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