Mel, Academic publishing is split today into two parallel universes:
A) The Open Access community and B) The Traditional Publishers using business models that pre-date the industrial revolution. Some publishers are slowly moving from (B) to (A). Some others still doing (B) are hoping that (A) will go away and that they will survive with their traditional business models. Sadly enough, most of the scientific and technical societies do (B). For example IEEE, ACM and ACS. IEEE went even to the extreme of lobbying *against* the NIH Public Access policy. http://publicaccess.nih.gov/ (That requires all NIH publicly funded research to be published in Open Access so it is available to the taxpayers who... paid for it). IEEE want's to protect its stream of +$50M/y revenue that results from Journal subscriptions and conferences. As Clay Shirky said: Institutions lose track of their mission and quickly turn to focus on self-preservation... Fresh minded publishers, such as PLoS and BiomedCentral have embraced the Open Access model, and have promoted policies in support of Open Access publishing for Federally Funded research (there is an ongoing bill that will extend the NIH public access policy to other 11 Federal agencies). Your options today, then come down to: 1) Find an Open Access Journal in the area of your interest, and publish with them. or 2) Attempt to not transfer your copyright when publishing with a traditional Journal that does (B), and instead just give them the license that they need to publish your work. Typically a Creative Commons by Attribution License should do the trick. In this option, be ready for a fight... or 3) Start your own Open Access Journal. In the domain of Medical Image Analysis, we took option (3), about six years ago: http://www.insight-journal.org/ We made it open, we made it free, we made it reproducible. --- The typical argument that you will hear is that Traditional Journal in (B) have the "best reputation", and highest "impact factors", and that therefore you should bend to their primitive intellectual property practices. The reality in the ground is that "impact factor" is a bogus measure, computed by a company using a "proprietary method", that nobody have ever managed to reproduce; and that "Reputation" is something that we (as a community) do for the Journals, when we send our best papers to them, review (for free) for them, serve as associate editors (for free) for them, serve as editors (for free) for them. It is quite a nice business model, when you think about it. They get their content for free, the quality verification for free, and sell content at high prices. For example, some Elsevier Journals has higher profit margins than Microsoft and Google: http://www.righttoresearch.org/blog/6-reasons-open-access-matters-to-the-medical-commu.shtml -- PLoS gained a reputation of excellence in just about six years, beating Science and Nature, that have been around for more than a century. So, reputation can be build, as long as a community commits to its principles. (...you know that better than most of us..) You probably will also be exposed to the fallacy of "Publish or Perish", which sadly is the mother of all the current mediocrity in the larger field of scientific research. It doesn't take too long to figure out that if academics are rewarded for the number of published papers, then they will publish as many paper as they can, with as little content as they can. Helas, that's what we get today. --- Stick to your guns and your Open Source instincts. Academic publishing is broken, and Open Access is part of the remedy. Luis ------------------------ On Sat, Aug 20, 2011 at 2:12 AM, Mel Chua <m...@redhat.com> wrote: > (The subject line is an allusion to > http://www.u.arizona.edu/~rubinson/copyright_violations/Go_To_Considered_Harmful.html.) > > As some of you know, I started grad school this week. And... culture shock. > Ohhhh boy, culture shock. (Yes, I know every professor who's had me for > POSSE is now chortling with we-told-you-so glee.) One incident came today, > when at the urging of Karl Fogel, who runs http://questioncopyright.org, I > looked into academic copyright -- specifically, what's the deal for the > places TOS typically submits to (FIE and SIGCSE)? > > A few hours and a quietly dawning horror later, I... think I've screwed up. > My first couple co-submissions of work on teaching open source are, > ironically, *unable* to be open-licensed. I've documented my naive findings > here: > http://blog.melchua.com/2011/08/20/in-which-mel-is-saddened-and-bewildered-by-academic-copyright-assignments/ > > Please tell me that I'm missing something. How can we get > academically-published TOS output released under open licenses? Why do we > put up with this? Yes, I understand the publishing industry needs to make > money and this "way of doing things" was well-intentioned at the time they > were designed, but... but... why? > > --Mel > > PS: This isn't the only thing I've written about academic culture shock, btw > -- for instance, > http://blog.melchua.com/2011/08/17/academic-culture-shock-grad-student-ta-training/. > _______________________________________________ > tos mailing list > tos@teachingopensource.org > http://lists.teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos > _______________________________________________ tos mailing list tos@teachingopensource.org http://lists.teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos