Creative Commons For Science 113
chrisspurgeon writes "The folks at Creative Commons are rolling out a new project aimed at improving the dissemination of scientific publications and data. The National Institutes of Health is already proposing mandated Open Access to all NIH-funded research, and many scientists welcome the free redistribution of their papers, they just don't know the legal details of how to do it. The Science Commons project will take on the copyright problems unique to scientists (things like pre and post prints, and electronic vs. paper journal distribution)."
Great (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great (Score:4, Insightful)
If I were making this post or publishing work that I'd done for some government or company, then the copyright goes to that government or company, because that published work was written by an extension of the government or company (me) and is thier property.
If that guy invented CDs and DVDs (or the technology behind them) did so as part of his job, he will get nothing. Gallileo got nothing but prison time for his discoveries. Archimedes got nothing for his discoveries. Not fair, but a reality.
Re:Great (Score:1)
If I were making this post or publishing work that I'd done for some government or company, then the copyright goes to that government or company, because that published work was written by an extension of the government or company (me) and is thier property.
You are correct. The phrase you're looking for is "work for hire". Work prepared by an employee that falls within the scope of their employment is owned by their employer (all rights reserved).
Re:Great (Score:3, Interesting)
True, but the situation could become a little bit more muddled when -- while you may be an employee of a university, but the funding (which you wrote the proposal for) comes from a government agency.
Some government agencies require that all work done with their funding pass into the public domain, and yet the University typically tries to claim copyright (and patent rights) over the publications and inventions produced, at the same time.
Yet -- your grant is already paying the University for the "p
Re:Great (Score:1)
Not the US federal government (including all NIH grants). The Bayh-Dole Act [google.com] gives the copyright and patents rights to the grantee or contractor and retains only limited rights to the government and taxpayers. You certainly wouldn't be alone if you don't like this, but it is the law. The law was passed (in 1980) because of a perception that federally funded research was just sitting in labs and not actually be
Go Larry (Score:5, Insightful)
Keep up the good work!
Taxpayer funded reseach is not for profit (Score:3, Insightful)
That data, source code must be public domain or at least a BSD style license. This follows the federal government in that its publications are public domain.
Additionally, a financial statement of how you spent your taxpayer funded research money should be available for free, and be published on the internet.
In other word
Re:Taxpayer funded reseach is not for profit (Score:2, Interesting)
Too Late, already done: xxx.lanl.gov (Score:3, Informative)
http://xxx.lanl.gov/
sorry, its not porn. don't know why they chose xxx
Re:Too Late, already done: xxx.lanl.gov (Score:1)
http://arxiv.org
past discussions (Score:5, Insightful)
Rules (Score:2)
Whatever is left over is free game for this good idea...
Re: yer sig (Score:2)
Excellent. (Score:1)
It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this is excellent, but only academic and possibly government funded research will use this. The pharmaceutical and bio-tech companies will continue to do their own thing and make billions.
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:1)
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:2, Insightful)
Those of us in academia also publish in the expectation of a benefit from doing so. Whether we do so for altruistic reasons, or for tenure, or in hopes of attracting the attention of the MacArthur Foundation, doesn't matter -- we publ
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:2)
Since I'm not a scientist I may be talking out my ass here, but I've always had the notion that government and academic research is the larger part of the research done in the US.
The pharmaceutical and bio-tech companies will continue to do their own thing and make billions.
As they should. I dislike greedy and parasitic companies that have their lawyers lay exclusive claim to anything they can get their mitts on, but I don't see h
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:3, Funny)
Exactly! Before this happens, IBM will start shipping the Apache web server and Sun will release the Solaris source code!
Big corporations will never see the benefit to letting other eyes look over source code or bio research!
Oh, wait...
Re:It won't affect for-profit science though... (Score:2)
I think most of the research gets published anyhow as part of various governmental approval processes. Certainly anything patented gets published. Really, this initiative is more about republication rights and increasing access to published material than about getting it published in the first place.
EricSee your HTTP headers here [ericgiguere.com]
US government does this already (sometimes)? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a US government scientist, just found out that journals must have two types of copyright agreements, don't know if this is universal:
1. For most people, all rights go to [journal].
2. If more than X co-authors are US. government employees, the work must be Public Domain.
I believe this is forced on the journals as the price of accepting work from government scientists. This, is a Good Thing the government is doing (for once) over publishing industry. Don't know if this is universal across agencies, journals, sorry if the above paraphrase is impeferfect (legalese isn't in front of me right now).
Re:US government does this already (sometimes)? (Score:3, Informative)
"It should be pointed out that when an article is declared a "work of the U.S. Government" it is not simply that the copyright cannot be transferred to the AMS, but rather, that the work is declared public domain and no copyright protection exists for it at all. Despite numerous articles published each year in AMS journals that have been declared U.S. Government works by the authors, the AMS att
PLOS (Score:1)
Re:PLOS (Score:2, Informative)
For years, journals have imposed "page charges" to defray part of the publication costs; PLOS and others recover essentially all of the costs from their authors (but since most or all of their distribution is electronic, their costs are lower than for traditional print journals). Their authors' fees are higher than typical "page charges" since they hav
Re:PLOS (Score:1)
Q. How many PhDs does it take to change a light bulb?
A. 4. One to screw in the bulb, and 3 to co-author the paper.
Re:US government does this already (sometimes)? (Score:1)
Re:US government does this already (sometimes)? (Score:2)
http://www.jcb.org/misc/copyright.pdf
There are apparently special terms for government employees (see the huge box with special info in it?) but as we're at a private university, that doesn't directly apply to us even though we are mostly funded by a federal agency (NIH).
Scientific Journals (Score:2)
(yes - the answer is that they'll be publishing the highest quality research results and providing a service to their readers by sifting throught the garbage, but still, how long will it take for HighQualityPublicResearch.com to come along?)
Re:Scientific Journals (Score:2)
You also have to take into account the fact that a lot of people still like reading magazines instead of reading computer monitors. How else could newspapers stay in business when most of the news comes off the public news feeds that are available for free off the
Re:Scientific Journals (Score:1)
I'd trust a trade magazine or reputable scientific journal before I'd trust something I saw on the 'web. For the same reason I'd trust Encyclopedia Britannica over Wikipedia.
Re:Scientific Journals (Score:2)
Re:Scientific Journals (Score:1, Interesting)
Next Question (Score:2)
And then how will every scientific society that is funded by journal profits continue to exist and do positive things for their community?
Re:Next Question (Score:2)
Re:Next Question (Score:2)
Re:Next Question (Score:2)
There may not be a completely satisfying answer to the question because the answer changes all the time, and what works today may not work next week. But I hope the open-access ventures can be sustained somehow over the
Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Good Luck (Score:2)
Re:Good Luck (Score:2)
Can the public read high level journals? (Score:2)
Re:Can the public read high level journals? (Score:2)
Journals are not the place for this (Score:2)
Re:Journals are not the place for this (Score:2)
Re:Scientific Journals (Score:2)
BBC Radio 4 (Score:5, Interesting)
You can listen to it online [bbc.co.uk] from the BBC website. It requires Real Player, however.
Well damn...... (Score:1)
BBC Radio 4documentary on Free Publishing revoluti (Score:4, Interesting)
To listen to the programme http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/science/rams/publish.r am [bbc.co.uk] 'Listen Again' service will happily send a RealAudio stream of the programme which mplayer --dump-stream will happily rip for you. (The Beeb say they can only offer streaming media because their rights agreements don't cover other formats :/ ) No, I'm not connected with Aunty Beeb in any way, I'm just a Radio 4 junkie :)
Good thing! (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a very good thing. If my tax dollars are going to support the research, I hope it benefits as many people as possible (instead of just the big PHaRMA [phrma.org] ).
I had heard that the Pharma people have a way around this. They will co-sponsor research with NIH, and when it comes time to publish, claim that all of the good stuff came from their share of the funding (and hence claim it as their IP). I don't know how true this is, but that's what I've heard.
I have been on the lookout for quality (human) Microarray data for doing predictive data mining with some exciting new techniques, but can't find too many such sets around. Looking at the revenues of Affymetrix (for instance), one would think there would be oodles of data out there; but this is not the case. Yes, I am aware of the SMD, etc.
You may thank RMS for this (in part) (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the idea of "free" as in speech, people. And this is why the free software paradigm is more important than just getting stuff done and providing low-cost solutions. Bio-research is extremely heavily encumbered with patents and costs. I'm extremely happy to see several initiatives (see for example the BIOS initiative and the open access initiative) slowly gain momentum.
Hell, we had to pay to get an article published (quite common) and then pay another 30$ to get a copy of the journal issue (and, no, there is not such thing as free internet access for high-profile journals) to read our own article.
I really want publishers and research companies to make money, but public funded research must be free for all. This is humanity's intellectual property, not the coca-cola recipe!
P.
Just to clarify.. (Score:3, Informative)
But let me share something with you..
There is a program called SBIR (Small Business Inovation Research). In which small businesses ( under 500 employees) can submit for grants for very (typically) very specific "problems" the various federal agencies want to have solved. With an end result being commercialization of your product/technology.
It goes like this..
1. Feds put out a list of solicitations
2. You submit a paper describing your idea and how commercially viable it is
3. You may or may not get "Phase I" funding for research.
4. Now, if you did well in Phase I you can submit for "Phase II" funding. Which gives you more money. This step is primarily to help get your product into the market. So you better have a good set of sales numbers ready.
Sometimes the "product" is something that the Feds will want to buy from you (e.g. NASA, US Army, etc..) and other times it will have civilian application. So if you want it to have civilian application, you can work on that too with the grant money.
And in regards to IP, you retain exclusive rights to ALL work you have done. And the US Govt. also has right to the technology, but not to sell it, just to use/improve/rework it.
This is not free money, you do need other sources of capital in order to progress in the funding. They aren't giving out free money without you doing some work and showing you can generate outside interest.
The point of the program is to grow the US economy and also to provide the US Govt. with R&D for technology it finds it has a need for.
There are many details that I have just glossed over. But you can find out more here [sba.gov].
There is a national conference twice a year to learn more about the program. You can find out about that by going here [sbirworld.com].
It has a sister-program called STTR which allows you to work with a university and use their labs and staff. You can learn about both at the conference, I find them quite informative.
Re:Just to clarify.. (Score:2)
Some company/researcher uses his connections into the military-industrial complex to convince some SBIR flunky to put the ideas from the company/researcher into whatever RFP applies to them. The RFP is printed, the company/researcher "applies" to it, and whaddaya know
After helping apply for 2 SBIRs in the materials field, I came to understand that too many SBIRs are like that. To put it sim
Re:Just to clarify.. (Score:1)
The feds and previous SBIR awardees so much as tell everyone that, not in the way you say it though. You make it sound as though it is a conspiracy to give away public money to the "friends" of the govt.
It is stated plainly that you should seek assitance from other federal agencies or businesses when wording your RFP.
And they do have some blanket solicitations that can get your project in the door and perhaps it will be considered for a future solicitation.
The i
Re:Just to clarify.. (Score:2)
When you write the words for the RFP that you will "apply" for, I strongly contest your definition of "work for it". Setting up the conditions for the test, that you yourself will undergo, is called "rigging the game". I'm sure that in today's crony-capitalism environment, you probably don't even understand what the hell I'm saying here.
As for conferences
CC License Welcome But Unnecessary to Self-Archive (Score:1)
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=82084& cid=7217869 [slashdot.org]
A CC License is always desirable and welcome, but it is unnecessary for the self-archiving of authors' own peer-reviewed journal articles. With 93% of journals having already given their authors the green light to self-archive
http://romeo.eprints.org/stats.php [eprints.org]
what is needed is th
open access to science (Score:2, Informative)
Open Access Overview
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm [earlham.edu]
(my introduction to OA for those who are new to the concept)
Open Access News blog
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html [earlham.edu]
(my blog, updated daily)
SPARC Open Access Newsletter
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/arch ive.htm [earlham.edu]
(my newsletter, published monthly)
FAQ on the NIH public-access policy
http://www.earlham.edu/~ [earlham.edu]
no more... (Score:1)
Astronomy's model (Score:2)
It's so handy, I tend to use it instead of hunting up the paper copies in my 'box of printouts'. Yes, it's actually faster/easier to find something I've already read by getting it online, than to hunt in a file cabinet.
And they have excellent search, reference chasing (you can find all papers that cite a given paper, or simply see all references a paper uses), and even
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
Nope... (Score:4, Insightful)
What would be an idea is a repository of CC licenced scientific papers which academic critics can review.
Alternatively, Universites could run their own dedicated sites for papers; they *only* allow papers from their University to be made available there but anyone can read / reproduce them under the terms of the licence.
Re:Nope... (Score:1)
So I can publish a "scientific" paper about linux causing aids, and have it "peer-reviewed" by the good folks at the GNAA, next thing you know, people will believe it.
Re:Nope... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Safe sex is in the palm of your hand.
Public service announcement: True Love Waits (Score:1)
Hehe... I wonder if the True Love Waits [christiantoday.com] crowd would like that as a slogan. ;)
Riiiiiiiiight! (Score:3, Interesting)
This quote is really a steaming pile. Like today public and private school degrees are anything but purchased products? Get real. In the United States (and certain Caribbean islands), a university "education" is purchased for a price just like anything else. Rarely do grades and actual knowledge have much to do with obtaining a degree.
Re:Nope... (Score:2)
Can you say "peer review"? Many many crackpots have spread much more rubbish than you care to imagine -- and in the end, they were right.
Review is what separates the crackpots from the geniuses.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
The review system requires some work to administer (even when the reviewing itself is on a volunteer basis). People may worry that without exclusive distribution rights, publishers may not be able to raise the money to support such systems.
I don't know enough about the expenses here
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know enough about the expenses here to say whether that's a real problem.
Roughly speaking, there are no expenses.
The editor is usually a volunteer, and the reviewers are always volunteers. The editor sends your manuscript to two or three referees, who mark
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
There are some journals that operate with a "volunteer" editor, but they have trouble competing with journals that have a paid full-time staff, like Nature for example. Running a journal of that size is a huge operation; it requires so much time and effort that it can't be done by volunteers.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
Is Nature really a scientific journal? That's a serious question: it's not in my field, and I'm not familiar with it. As I recall, it's printed on glossy paper, and has advertisements?
I'm familiar with journals like Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) and American Economic Review (AER), which do have some paid staff, paid for through t
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
Absolutely. It carries some top science. It is cross-disciplinary, though, so it's supposed to be accessible to all scientists. The Nature Publishing Group [nature.com] is big business, and has a bunch of subsidiary journals that are also well-respected. For example, in my field, Nature Neuroscience [nature.com] publishes a lot of the top articles. Nature Neuroscience alone has a paid staff of about 10-15 people I think.
Your view of publishing is naive at best (Score:2)
---Roughly speaking, there are no expenses.---
Your statements show a very naive, if not completely incorrect understanding of what goes into publishing a scientific journal. There are lots of costs involved, and nearly every journal that exists has a score of paid employees.
---The editor is usually a volunteer---
Not true in most cases. Most journals have a paid full time editor (at least this is certainly the case for biology journals). There is usually an editorial board made up of scientists.
Peer review is not everything (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know. Maybe it's just because most free access journals are unknown startups with no established history. If you submit a manuscript to one of the established and prestigious scientific journals such as Science, Nature or PRL (at least in my field), it's not only going to be peer reviewed but it's going to be subjected to a peer-review-from-hell. That, on the other hand, is unlikely to happen if you submit it to a free access journal...
Re:Peer review is not everything (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Peer review is not everything (Score:2)
That surely sounds as if peer review is everything.
That is unlikely to happen if you submit it to a free access journal.
Remember how the peer review system works (I know you know, but this is for the folks who don't)? The reviewers are folks like you, who've sub
Re:Peer review is not everything (Score:1)
Yep. I realized that soon after I posted - it was ambiguous. What I meant to say was that having a journal with a peer review practise does not necessarily mean that the journal is of a high scientific quality. The quality of the peer review is everything.
That editor and those reviewers can function the same way, regardless of the method or terms of publication.
Fair enough. I suppose it'll just take to build it.
Re:Peer review is not everything (Score:2)
Once you have tenure, submit your work to the best Libre journals in your field, and let the editors of the journals you're currently submitting to know that you eagerly await the day that their journals allow access without copyright restrictions, so that you can resume your relationship with them.
Until you have tenure, of course, you can't do that.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't think so. The Creative Commons idea doesn't affect peer-review, reputation, etc., that are the bedrock of legitimate scientific publications. What it will do is make it easier for crackpots (and the rest of us) to read significant scientific publications.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:1)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a physics grad student now, but let me give my take on it. The answer to your question is really yes or now. Much like the printing press and the internet let's any crackpot publish/disseminate bogus facts, but it gives the same abilities to people that have something worthwhile to say.
But how do you tell the good stuff from the bad? Firstly, most scientists worth their salt will be able to immediately distinguish whether a paper is written by an expert in the field, or someone bullshitting. Now as to someone outright lying, well the case of Jan Hendrick Schon reveals that problem can exist within the peer-reviewed literature too. However, seeing how afterwards he was exposed he was fired, and even had his PhD revoked by his university, can hopefully deter other would-be frauders. Scientific 'trolling' may be a harder problem to crack, though.
One such method to determine relative 'goodness' of an author, or a paper, is to see how many times it is cited by another paper. In fact, one of my former professors at U. Penn was one of the motivators for this method because she experienced alot of discrimination trying to get a faculty job. (In the old days, and even today to a smaller extent, female PhD physicists are underrepresented). She had to use these citation numbers to prove her work was as influential as some of the top men in the field.
Of course, with fully open access, it will be relatively easy to create many 'spam' articles that cite your own article to increase it's perceived importance. One way to combat this might be to weigh citing scores lower if they come from within an intimate circle. Another would be to have a moderation and meta-moderation system to acknowledge which papers in their field are worthy of being cited. Of course this goes back to the 'elite' problem of someone being unfairly shut out, but at least they can still publish their paper openly, if they need to point out 20 years down the line they were the first to publish a certain theory.
There actually already are such open venues, for example the arxiv [arxiv.org] will allow AFAIK anybody to publish a paper there.
Other than publications, the American Physical Society [aps.org], for example, gets some federal funding and hence provide some public services. For example, at some of the larger meetings they might provide a room for presentations from non-physicists or others, kind of like the local public access station on cable TV. Sometimes talks are given on philosophy of physics, sometimes there are just crackpot talks, but any decent physicist will be able to tell by a talk whether it is worthwhile or not.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2, Insightful)
Like that Clonex or whoever, the UFO cult who claimed they cloned a human being. Despite the fact they couldn't even produce a photograph of the cloned baby, the media (thanks to a slow news week) plastered this "breakthrough" everywhere.
The average dope still thinks it's true.
People think that abortions cause breast cancer, because some born-again christian
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:1)
But those problems you mention are independent of an open science publication service. Or perhaps maybe they'll get worse, but if you want to deceive people you can easily do so under the current system anyway.
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2, Insightful)
One such method to determine relative 'goodness' of an author, or a paper, is to see how many times it is cited by another paper. In fact, one of my former professors at U. Penn was one of the motivators for this method because she experienced alot of discrimination trying to get a faculty job. (In the old days, and even today to a smaller extent, female PhD physicists are underrepresented). She had to use these citation numbers to prove her work was as influential as some of the top men in the
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:1)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
Re:Tragedy of the scientific commons? (Score:2)
If you consider the citation network as a directed graph, the degree of the nodes follow a power law. See authors Strogatz, Albert, and Barabasi for the details.
One of the familiar results of power law networks is that, out of all papers, only 20% of them are cited 80% of the time. The famous get more famous and the obscure stay obscure.
IANAGT - I Am Not a Graph Theoretician
Thank God!