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Science

Scientists Gearing Up to Publish Unrestricted Journals 202

Ender, Duke_of_URL writes: "Genomeweb reports that scientists are gearing up for the Sept 1 boycott of science publishers, because only two publishers (Genome Biology and PubMedCenteral) have met the demands of open and copyright free access to science articles. As part of this process they're developing a means to publish their own journal articles." If you missed the history of this showdown, slashdot has published a few previous stories. Great news for science if they succeed - awful news if they fail.
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Scientists Gearing Up to Publish Unrestricted Journals

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    nobody cares

    if they were sports figures, pop singers or actors in hollywood, then people would support them. but in most of the "civilized" world, people just have disdain for anyone smarter than them (scientists). only pop culture figures are respectable

  • by Anonymous Coward
    VERY bad news if they don't succeed. Given so much scientific research is funded by tax dollars, the results should be available to the taxpayers and not filtered through a protected commercial monopoly.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    "Why haven't market forces, supply and demand, driven the price down?"

    Think about the nature of those forces in this case:
    * Supply: How many of these generally well-respected journals are there in a given field? The ones which are, are, until someone takes the time to start another one and it aquires the editorship and history to become respected.
    * Demand: Researchers who need the papers published in a respected journal so the researcher gets name recognition/ professional respect / career advancement.

    Until another set of well-regarded journals are started, the ones which exist now are the whole game, and can expect to fight change until the competition is stiff enough. What you're seeing is the result of supply & demand under a certain set of conditions (high demand for a limited supply).
  • by Anonymous Coward
    1. As pointed out above, almost this entire publishing clusterf*** is paid for by government grants and taxpayer supported institutions (even so called private universities receive enormous amounts of federal grants and huge indirect subsidies by reason of their tax exemptions). The public has a strong interest in making sure that their taxpayer dollars are well spent and in being able to access the fruits of those expenditures.

    2. The dramatic increase in the subscription price of scientific journals is not due to increasing costs or anything like that. In the 1980's a few international publishing companies such as Reed Elisever, a Dutch outfit, began buying up large numbers of publishers of scientific and medical journals. At the time, this was noted in the business press, and many scientists and journal editors complained about it without much effect. The subsequent increases in subscription rates was predicted and is easily explained. The money comes from, you guessed it, see paragraph 1 above.

    3. Archival availability of scientific papers is a legitimate concern. However, the solution is not far off. PubMed is run by the National Library of Medicine, a division of the National Institutes of Health, which is a agency of the US Government. Given the facts set forth in paragraph 1 above, it is entirely appropriate for PubMed to maintain a web site for bio-medical research. The Library of Congress should be responsible for maintaining archives and both PubMed and LoC should work with their counterparts in the EU and other G-8 nations to mirror these resources in several world wide locations. A beneficial side effect of such a system would be making the latest bio-medical research available to physicians, public health officials and researchers in the third world where western prices for journals have made them effectively unavailable.

    nuff said

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Even if this particular effort fails there will be another. The greed of the established journal publishers will rightfully go down in history as an abonimation.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Is how do you tell person from person, and who has the ability to moderate.

    We've recently had a 15 year old get to be #3 online legal advisor... I'm sure you've noticed dumbing down in /. over the last 3 years.

    This is not good if you're a respectable journal.

    Even if you only give out tokens to real researchers, how do you keep those tokens/passwords from getting stolen?

    -- Ender, Duke_of_URL
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @05:07PM (#2193230)
    I work in the humanities, and for us its precisely the archiving that's giving us headaches when considering electronic publication. We would dearly like to move on to a model of electronic publishing, since it would cut the (crippling) publication costs, and allow even the poorest of universities access to our findings. Our main worry in doing so is the ability to find today's published research a few years from now.

    I'll give you an example: I'm a historian, and my sources are four hundred years old. But I also use historical works published during the last 150 years. Historians often refer to these articles as "dated, but still" usefull. And I can find them in most university libraries. Contrast that with articles published on the web. In 1995 a Dutch professor told me he could guarantee that articles published at his website would be available for the next 20 years (short timeframe for me!), but he got cancer and now it's all gone. It lasted 5 years. That makes web-based publishing seem like an awfully fragile way of distribution.

    Of course, just because and article (or book) disappears from a website doesn't mean it's gone forever, but how can you trust that it hasn't been changed when it appears somewhere else? If you think that's not a major concern, you're wrong. Several histroical subjects are stil highly controversial (for instance the Holocaust, the Turkish genocide of the Armenians, American gun ownership, etc.). There are plenty of people out there who for a variety of reasons would love to change our work if they had the chance (including the authors after they have had time to reflect!).

    These concerns are the main ones behind the reluctance to move to electronic publishing in my field, and I know them firsthand since I edit a historical journal. (Yeah, peer review is also important, but not the main consideration) The printers bleed us dry, while webspace at our local university is free. But we have no idea if our stuff is available in five years time if we don't put it on paper.

    So we also want our articles to be kept free and open electronically, but with guarantees that they will stay so for decades without tampering. Nobody is neither able nor willing to guarantee that, so we'll stick to dead trees with electronic editions as an expensive afterthought to the more prestigious journals.
  • Posted by polar_bear:

    Clout? Peer review publications don't waste much time with trolls. You have to have a reputation, or do something for someone with a reputation, to be considered for review. Your article is sent out to a random selection of peers who offer suggestions or approve your article, then it's published. Oh yeah, none of the reviewers is paid. That's as much clout as you can get.

    I guess you didn't read the entire thread. I wasn't strictly referring to the scientific journals, I was talking about authors (who get paid) in general.

    For instance, the average reporter who slaves away churning out stories five days a week doesn't typically have any rights to those stories. However, after years of being a reporter they may actually develop some standing and be able to write a column or books - at that point, they have a little more clout and they can negotiate higher rates, and retaining the rights to their columns.

  • Posted by polar_bear:

    Many writers, whether they be scientists or freelance columnists or journalists, are forced to sign draconian contracts where in order to get their work published, they are forced to relinquish all rights to it.

    Um, while it's true authors often relinquish the rights to a work for a limited period or even permanently, they're never forced to do so. It's a voluntary thing. I write an article, I sign a contract giving the publisher certain rights and a while later I get a check. If I want to get paid for my work, it's not unreasonable to expect a publisher to want some rights -- possibly all rights -- to the work in exchange for money.

    The shameful thing isn't that authors have to sign contracts - it's that in the case of scientific journals the authors aren't being compensated and the works that they essentially donate are being restricted.

    The only way for an author to get paid and and retain all rights is to become established and have the clout to negotiate a decent contract.
  • As others have pointed out, individual rates for from between $50 to $500. But this assumes that you only use the journal, etc.

    Instituational licenses typically can start at $2000, and go as high as $10,000 per year; this may or may not include access to the online version as well.

    Also, going up to the root of this thread, most journal that charge you for all this send you several (25, typically) final proofs of your article, as it would have been printed, which you may 'freely' distribute as you wish. Any more, and you have to ask the publisher for more permission.

  • There is a very important problem with sending out DVD's. You can be fairly certain that in 40 years time people will still be able to read words on paper (they might fell it to be a bit oldfashioned), but you probably wont be able to find hardware that can read that DVD.

    Even today you would have to look rather hard to find a drive for 5.25 inch floppys and even harder for 8 inch floppys. Finding a punch card reader will be even harder still.

  • I've been thinking about this a bit.

    Seems to me that you need three categories of submissions:
    • Papers/Articles
    • Peer-review responses
    • Discussion


    Papers/articles and peer-review responses can only be submitted by those given "peer-review" status. Such people can moderate any of the above categories. Discussion messages can be submitted by anyone and moderated by anyone.

    Peer-review involves both moderating a submitted paper/article and submitting a response, the purpose of which is to justify the moderation. Discussion can be in response to peer-review or to the paper itself.

    Peer-reviewers can be meta-moderated by other peer-reviewers, and a "credibility score" is kept for each peer-reviewer. This score is available for all to see, and the site should generate a list ordered by credibility.

    It'll probably be necessary to compartmentalize the peer-reviewers by field, so that they can peer-review articles and papers submitted only by others in the same field (and can only meta-moderate people in the same field). It might be easier to just run multiple field-specific sites, but searching might be more powerful if they were combined.

    I suppose there might also be a "credibility score" associated with everyone and computed strictly from moderation done to discussion messages, but it's important to keep that separate from the "credibility score" computed from the moderation of papers and peer-review responses.

    How to grant peer-review status? Good question. One way would be to allow an existing peer-reviewer to "approve" a new peer-reviewer. Another might be to grant everyone the chance to submit one paper/article and, if it gets moderated high enough, they are granted peer-review status. This will probably require a lot more thought, so feel free to chime in!

    Thoughts?


    --
  • This is why you want the archives to be mirrored across the world. This should happen automatically for any new content that appears on the site. Many here seem to be concerned about how electronic media formats (like DVD) tend towards obsolescence and aren't terribly resistant to destruction. In the computer world, I think the best safeguard against that is active maintenance of the mirror group. As long as at least a couple of sites remain active, the data will remain safe.

    It seems obvious that the archives should be "append only". They'll grow over time. But I suspect storage technology improvements will remain ahead of the amount of data that need to be archived, at least for a reasonable amount of time.


    --
  • by JanneM ( 7445 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:36PM (#2193237) Homepage
    Let's say I write a paper (which I'm supposed to do anyway, because it's part of my job). I send it in to a journal - without getting paid anything by the journal - to get the result out, and to get another line in my CV. They farm that paper out to a reviewer. That reviewer is sometimes paid, but more often than not, they only get _their_ datapoint in their resume. If it's accepted, I edit the paper and resend it. After a few iterations it is accepted in its final form. Then I often have to format the paper according to the standards of the journal (sometimes the journal does this step) and sign over all rights to that text to the publisher. Eventually it gets printed.

    After all this, where most of the work is done unpaid and outside of the publisher, they can still charge enough for the journal that my department cannot afford to actually get a copy... And today, prices are getting high enough that not even the university library will take in the more expensive journals without a massive interest among employees.

    /Janne

  • I have to wonder how this will effect the 'For-Pay' re-distributers of this type of information. Is this kind of initiative going to cut into Ovid's (www.ovid.com [ovid.com]), ISI's and Silver Platter's (www.silverplatter.com [silverplatter.com]) margins?

  • by dso ( 9793 )
    The one thing you missed is the part before #1 where all the science is completed. Do you know how much scientific hardware costs? All those cadavers and genes and rockets and chemicals. It's bloody expensive and most papers take years of labour to produce, sometimes even a lifetime of the researcher. Honestly, I believe that the publishing and peer review part is a small fraction of the cost of the actual science that is really happening.
    I beieve that the initial setup may be capital intensive but the benefits that come out of it will be substantial.
  • A lot of libraries can't afford the exorbitant prices to get the journals... so they'll have a select few. Anything else, you just can't get. Freely available shouldn't mean "freely available to those within driving distance of an extremely well-off university library". The _large_ university I went to had issues with keeping some of these journals on the shelves due to costs. Any small university is pretty much out of luck.

    Besides, the real issue here is that if scientists are going to pay for research, spend the time, write it up, edit it, etc... they should have some say as to how that information is made available. They're basically donating their time and effort to the journals, for pretty much zip in return.

    I frankly can't see that taking the computer files used to publish the journal and running them through a quick web format would take even a small chunk out of the journal's profits.
  • Because scientific papers are dead dull to someone who hasn't followed the specific field. I've read some mycology and uredinology monographs, and they're just plain hard to read if you don't know what they're trying to say. Science News does a good job at summing things up in a scientific way, but I can't imagine any of the papers I've seen would go over well in a newspaper.

    Article: "Look! We've discovered that plant rust is different from this other plant rust!"

    Reader: "Zzzzzz...."
  • I hate to post a simple 'me too' kind of message,
    but i will anyway.

    I must congratulate you on having the courage to state the truth in such plain and simple terms. 'Evil' is exactly the right word, thank you for not shying away from using it in all its glory.
  • So you'd need to be a bit more careful about moderation points. To reasonably model the current system, new moderators would need to be approved by the current moderators. And they might need to provide some proof for any credentials that they claimed. And one would need to use a secure communication protocol where the emphasis was not on not being read, but rather on not being modified by third parties. Etc.

    And approved moderators should have a special status when posting, possibly a +4 posting bonus, available (though not on by default). And non-approved moderators should be able to earn a posting bonus of up to, say, +4 (though they could loose it, too).

    There should also be an inner circle of moderators (say, automatic +5 posting bonus) that have the right to post articles without being pre-reviewed. These should need to be nominated by the approved moderators, and approved by the inner circle (or vice-versa).

    Also, approved moderators should be able to choose to use their posting bonus when posting anonymously.

    As usual, anyone should be able to earn moderator status, but earned moderation never takes one to the "approved moderator" status. That requires approval by the existing moderators.

    This is intentionally designed to be a bit more conservative than /., but to maintain much of the same flavor. One of the major differences is the existence of the circles of levels of approved moderation. These would provide a strong conservative (i.e., tending to preserve the tenor of the current system) thrust. This is a bit opposed to the design of /. which is, comparatively, designed to encourage excitement about items of the moment. As such, it would tend to encourage a different pace of discussion, and less flamboyance.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
  • I am not claiming that the evil is necessarily consciously schemed for and long intended. That isn't necessary. What is necessary is the examination of the consequences of the action on both individuals and on society at large.

    I contend that the current structure of the copyright law acts to widen the economic gaps between the levels of society. That it tends to increase the social stratification. That it is heading toward creating classes with access to specialized knowledge the access to which is controlled by a very few. (That's why the I mentioned the time-limited DVDs.) That it is favoring the development of a new class, call them GnososLords, who operate from the ability to allow or deny access to information. And that it is so acting as to vest the membership in that class not in those who are willing to learn the information, but rather in those who "own" it. As the Land Lords, friends or the King, were granted dominion over the land without working is, these new lords would be granted dominion over knowledge without bothering to learn it. And the term over which they would be granted that dominion would be in perpetuity. (Usually these would be corporations, or I would have added something about their heirs, but as things stand, that seems a bit beside the point.)

    And I say that this is evil. The land lords were evil, and only the superior arms of an invading force could have created them. These new lords are ostensibly not an invading force, but they are acting as if they were. And this is because the current legal structures, that we have inherited from that ancient invasion, have already created, or maintained, as I feel is more likely, though I haven't done the research as it is a side issue, an economic stratification such that the rulers of the corporations have no desire to accomodate those who are not of their class, but only to hire sufficient "public relations experts" to sufficiently mould public opinion to prevent large scale civil disturbance. (Note that I did not mention laws here. The laws tend to be interpreted to mean what these people want them to mean, but when they can't be twisted, then they are just ignored. I'm sure you can recall several instances within the past year, though probably most of them were too small scale to get beyond the local news, so I can't tell you what they were.)

    The long and the short of it is that people tend to act first in their own perceived self interest, and then in the interest of whatever group they identify with. And there exists a small group at the economic top of society that have powerful methods of acting. And they tend to cause things to happen to ensure and extend their control. They are not consciously and intentionally evil, but to over 98% of society their actions do more harm than good. This is evil. Their actions are intended to vest all control of social goals and customs within their own small insular group. This is evil. Evil even to themselves, though it may be to their short term benefit.

    And the whole problem is because of a particular social design that was imposed on Britain by the invading Normans (and before them by the Romans, though that had been in the process of ameliorating itself). This was a social design intended to allow an invading army to control an indigenous civilian population. And it is evil. Not maximally evil, one can easily observe many worse choices that were possible, but certainly not good, and certainly partially evil. If it isn't good, and is evil, then it's balance must be evil. And therefore actions intended to strengthen its tendencies and maintain its grip are evil.

    This was not a term use carelessly or unthinkingly. It was the only word in English that seemed to be approximately appropriate. I truly doubt that there has ever been anyone in history who thought of himself as evil, so it would be rediculous for me to accept a constraint that someone must think of himself as evil in order to be evil. Actually, most of those who choose to portray themselves as evil appear to be searching for attention, and unable to figure out how to get favorable attention. And most of them are fairly harmless (though not all).

    The ones that are actually evil are generally the "control freaks", and they generally consider themselves to be normal people. Perhaps a bit more moral than average. Some of them consider themselves to be much more moral than average. It depends on the exact form that their psychosis takes. Even the most extreme examples that we have didn't consider themselves evil, at least not from the evidence that we have. Adolf S. was certainly a truly terrible character, and quite evil. But there is no evidence that I have seen that indicates that he thought of himself as evil. He had factories that made lampshades out of human skin, but he thought of himself as someone who had taken on the heroic task of restoring German greatness. He was a patron of the opera. Crowds cheered him. It's true, that I'm sure he felt that some of the things that he (felt he) needed to do were regretable. But he felt that they were necessary. So he didn't see himself as evil. I do. I see all control freaks as evil. Some of them are more powerful than others.

    More: I see the desire within people to control as an inherent evil. A necessary component, but an extremely dangerous one. The definition that I use of a "control freak" is someone who allows this necessary component to assume a major share in the decision making process, such that the desire to increase the ability to control is, of itself, sufficient to justify a decision that will cause measureable harm to other people. If I were performing experiments, I would need to refine that definition further, but as it is, that suffices.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
  • The journals being discussed won't be found at your public library. Even the University of California (Berkeley) has had to trim the journal subscriptions substantially, because they were just too expensive. I don't know what the researchers in the areas cut do. Probably they have to buy their own personal subscriptions. Ouch!

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
  • The existence of evil is no reason for it's acceptance. An evil being common is no argument for it's maintenance.

    With the changes in the copyright laws in the last decade, the requirement that scientists give up copyrights to their work in order to publish has become a vile evil. Actions to avoid this are now easily justified that would have been difficult to justify earlier. Right now, with the recent example of Adobe in front of us, and a reasonable extrapolation of current trends, I'd say that nearly anything short of physical violence would be justified in trying to halt this juggernaut. And I'd probably just that on a case-by case basis.

    It's probably true that the publishing houses have not yet acted in ways grossly in violation of basic human rights. But there have been clear movements in that direction. Consider textbooks with CDs that have a part of the text. Or example code that is necessary in order to understand the book. These already exist, and are common. Now suppose that someone replaced these by a time-coded DVD. Not a big change. You might not even be able to tell it by visual inspection. But now the text becomes useless after... well, after however long the code was set to.

    Now suppose that professional journals started to appear in this form. There are lots of benefits, but the cost, given the current laws, is almost unbelievable. Yet there have been clear movements in this direction.

    The DMCA is evil. Those who support it are, to greater or lesser degree, evil. The only time that I will accept it as having any virtue at all is when the copyright is totally vested in the author, and he licenses the right to use it to other entities on a non-exclusive basis. And even that is a bit dicey. Some things should not be inheritable.

    The original copyright laws were pretty reasonable. But anytime that a monopoly of any nature is granted by the state, then we are entering into dangerous territory. The currently extended copyright laws are purely and simply evil.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
  • Unfortunately, this type of outright ownership by publishers and distributors of other people's work is quite common


    True, but for science to work, there must be a free exchange of ideas. Copyright law is getting tighter, and terms of use on electronic forms bites even deeper.

  • by Mike Schiraldi ( 18296 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @04:16PM (#2193248) Homepage Journal
    Why haven't market forces, supply and demand, driven the price down?
  • There is an existing version of this which is used extensively by the Computer Science field - CiteSeer [nec.com]

    This site indexes hundreds of thousands of papers, journal articles, and other publications (dissertations mostly). Each is cross-referenced and linked to the others through a widearray of pattern matching steps (sentance similarity for example)

    Imagine if this was extended to all other fields of research - it would probably move the fields forward by leaps just by making it much easier for researchers to locate and reference related work by their peers.

    Shannon

  • I work in particle physics and e-prints (electronic preprints) have been the standard
    way of communicating work for the past few years.
    ( See http://xxx.lanl.gov/ ). It's still usual to submit to a paper journal, but after the e-print submission. The paper journals do still perform a usefull service however, because the submissions are then sent out for peer review, so the final
    paper version may be of higher quality (although
    the changed versions are usually re-submitted to
    the e-print archive). It also looks better on future jobs applications to have papers accepted
    by established journals.

    The one example I know of an all-electronic
    refereed journal is http://jhep.mse.jhu.edu/
    but it hasn't really managed to build up it's
    reputation to the level that it needs to compete
    with the paper journals.
  • Definitely. This is why ISI and publishers including Elsevier put so much effort into lobbying congress, through the Software Information Industry Association, to cut funding [nature.com] to the PubScience [osti.gov] database project. They've got their sights set on PubMed (as distinction from PubMed Central), next.
  • First, 1% of a million is not 1000, but 10000.
    Yeah, that'd be a typo all right. Thanks for catching it.
    Second, you might read a bit more about breast cancer and probabilities. The BRCA genes much increase your chances of getting breast cancer. That's it. Like crossing in the middle of the street increases your chances of being hit by a car. But you can still cross the street and reasonably expect to live.
    I'm aware of how probability works. I think suggesting otherwise as you do here is silly; not only is it not central to my argument, but I don't think I suggested otherwise.
    Whether you've got the genes of not, you can take preventative measures to avoid breast cancer.
    That's great advice. Still, cancer detection, prevention, and treatment involves a lot more than just changing your diet.
    The $100 billion/yr cancer industry benefits from your ignorance and fears.
    Heh. Yeah, I'm afraid. Watch me quake. I was afraid when my mother was first diagnosed, and later when she went for surgery. I'm not really afraid anymore since she's doing pretty well seeing as how she's alive and the metastatis seems to have been caught.

    Still, up here in Canada there isn't anything resembling the "medical industry" that there is in the USA - frankly I thought that's what I was arguing against.

    I like to think of it as my mother, father, and people like them who benefit from my concerns. As to my ignorance, Sara-san, you'll have to complain to Simon Fraser University's faculty - they're the ones who taught me my physiology before I started CS.
    _________

  • by Xofer D ( 29055 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @07:52PM (#2193253) Homepage Journal
    Hey, if you can patent the software for silicon, why can't you patent the software for cells? :-(
    Prior art. You may have found the software for the cell, but you sure as shootin' didn't write it. What are you going to patent, "Method for creating life"? I think most companies patent "Process for identifying [PHENOTYPE] using genetic code analysis" (a phenotype is the result you get from a gene, like red hair - kinda like the difference between the binary and the output).

    You may have been joking, but a lot of people really do feel like this, and it's a serious problem. The British Columbia Cancer agency just stopped providing testing for Breast Cancer susceptibility genes to all BC families because "the BC Cancer Agency, through the Ministry of Health Planning, received legal notice from representatives of Myriad Genetics/MDS asserting patent rights for sequencing of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes". They priced the patent such that the BCCA can not afford to pay for it.

    My mother may carry these genes, and if she does, then I probably do and any children I may have might as well. Generations of my family could go through surgical amputation, toxic chemical treatments, and even risk death, if these genes are present in our DNA and if it manifests.

    So please, don't give me the argument that people are entitled to make money. They're actually not, because withholding this information is morally repugnant. How much does a mature, capable human life cost?

    I've often heard the argument that monetary compensation is offered to spur the investment of time and effort into scientific endeavour, and that if we were to stop this from happening then scientific progress would stagnate due to lack of interest. Right, okay - well, according to this study that I just found [nih.gov] if your mother lives to be 65, she has a 1% chance of dying of breast cancer within ten years. Hey CmdrTaco, how many people visit this site in a week? Let's say it's a million, and let's say none of you share a mother. One thousand of you will have a mother die of cancer if she lives to 65. Pretend you're one of those thousand unlucky people. How much of your time would you, personally give to see that that didn't happen? If your mother had cancer and you were not locked into your career (say you were in University, not 45 and in middle management) would you consider choosing a career related to cancer diagnosis or treatment? I sure am. And if you believe I care if I don't get a dime from it, you're wrong. I'm not required to do it, but I will work on it even if I have to work another job for my money.

    Some of you may wonder what I do that helps - I'm making my career in the area of human information access; intelligent searching, visualization, etc. In part, this is why I am extremely interested in the consolidation of information and its liberation from the greedy. If successful, I predict it will be the largest boost to research since well before the Internet, and probably for years to come.

    /. is a focus for a lot of people who are interested in Open Source and Free Software. Most are interested in a way to get their work done, or a way to learn about software, or just a stable platform. Some want to make $$$ fast! Here, however, we have an application which Free software is uniquely suited to:

    • It can evolve and change as this initative grows.
    • It is without cost and without proprietary encumberance.
    • It is stable and has unparalleled technical support.
    • It is already built mainly by people who have at least as good moral as buiness sense.
    Here we have an opportunity to provide an example of what can be done with the Free Software movement. It cannot be ignored as a serious foray into an enterprise-scale environment, and if the initiative succeeds it will be used by at least half of the scientific community. Proprietary software makers will be forced to be compatible with us for a change.

    More importantly, here we have the opportunity to catalyse scientific advancement. Try this: think of your friends, family, and coworkers and imagine that work you did help save that person's life, or made that person happier, or enable that other person to help you somehow. Heck, you can even think of the children - it actually works this time!

    I urge you to head on over to http://www.publiclibraryofscience.org/ [publiclibr...cience.org] and read up on it. If you can, offer your help, and mean it. If you can't help, tell your friends. It's worth it.
    _________

  • A good portion of grant money is set aside
    for library or administrative costs. These
    are used to purchase these journals, often
    at an extreme price/use ratio. So the tax
    payer actually pays more now as grants already
    have this built in the budgets.

    And as for those 'crappy papers', that depends
    in large part on the reviewers.
  • When /. implemented the karma system much was talked about the concept of reputation servers, sites like Slashdot where a contributor's veracity could be marked up and marked down by their peers according to the validity of their words. Bruce Sterling [rice.edu] used it as a minor plot thread in 'Distraction' but it seemed to quickly lost its impetus IRL - I guess it's relatively easy to get an idea of someone's rep on Slashdot but it's not a driving factor of being a contributor. I'm not a Kuro5hin reader but if Scoop offers 'reputation' over 'karma' it has a better basis for publication for peer review (and indeed a potentially important influence over individuals' lives).
  • You will note that as of five months ago, only about 12% believed that God had no part in human evolution.


    Sigh. Other than his failure to notice the original posters (nice!) troll, I fail to see anything extreme in the post to which you are responding.

    The way you mock public opinion


    Mockery! Smockery!! Dickory Dock!!!

    I think Gallup polls are a mockery of scientific method. So nyah!

    *Moons the Heavens*

    I don't think he was forcing anyone to do anything. Just an (misdirected, it was a troll) appeal to see the benign power of The Method. Science is not about religion, and neither should politics be. Maybe that's why politics and religion are always out of place in a social setting, because they get all mixed up in eachother. Maybe Science and religion should be treated the same way.

    Science = Orthodoxy - Mysticism
  • Or, in old school parlance (yeah, I'm old school :)

    10th grade == 3rd grade
  • by mcfiddish ( 35360 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:50PM (#2193264)
    Journals do actually do quite a bit of work. You submit a paper to them. Then they need to decide if they want to publish it, first of all. That takes some expertise to begin with.

    Then they need to find other scientists in the field with the expertise to review it. This requires that the journal has staff members who are up on the current research in the field, and who's doing what.

    Once the reviews come back, and you respond to the reviewer's comments (which often involves some disagreement), the journal needs to make a decision regarding the readiness of the paper to be published. If not, either it goes through another reviewer iteration, or it gets rejected. Again, this requires scientific expertise by the journal's staff.

    Finally, it gets published on paper and sent out to subscribers.

    All of this takes effort, and much of it is non-trivial. Granted, the scientist does the science, and writes it up, but the journal provides a service. Some journals have exorbitant subscription rates because they have few subscribers (libraries, usually).

    Scientists could get together and run their own free journals with quality research in them, but that's that much less time spent doing science. And as many scientists will tell you, much of their time is already spent doing non-science activities like sitting on committees and writing grant proposals.

    Not to diminish journals in any way, but "the world needs ditchdiggers, too!"
  • Quite right. Scientists are required to publish stuff, and the most valuable piece of the publication process is not the dead trees but the peer review, which is provided for free by other researchers.
  • by cr0sh ( 43134 )
    As I understand it, the process for a paper to appear in the journal goes something like this:

    1. Individual writes paper.
    2. Individual submits paper to journal.
    3. Journal sends paper for review to peers.
    4. Paper may be rejected or need changes, goto 1.
    5. Paper is accepted.
    6. Paper is printed in journal.
    7. Individual buys journal to see paper.

    Now, the expensive part (for the individual) lies in step 7 - that expense is to recoup the cost the publisher of the journal incurs for steps 3-6 (staff, mailing, printing, etc).

    All this still has to be replicated (well, aside from the printing and buying part) for internet distribution.

    Someone mentioned doing all of this via a k5 or /. style engine - which is an excellent plan, actually - but the rub with that idea is that such a site, in order to handle the number of viewers (which could get quite large - especially when /. gets wind of the URL!), you need a central server site - which costs money - which leads back to step 7.

    What doesn't cost money (or at least - what only costs the money that the individual submitting the paper is willing to go through)? Personal web site for the paper! However, how do you get peer review?

    What about a something akin to a webring - but with posting, moderation, peer review - basically a distributed Slashdot! Could this be done? Personally, I think it could - each individual who wants to publish would set up a node, on which papers could be reviewed, published, updated, moderated, commented upon, etc - the owner of the node would be responsible for its upkeep. These nodes would be connected to each other in groups - possibly by "area of interest" (biology, physics, etc) - all could be connected to each other, or possibly through a central node (maybe hosted by the NSF?) - and all nodes would communicate to each other ratings, etc - of the papers on the individual hosted nodes.

    Now, the only ones bearing the cost are the individuals - by bringing in moderation, meta-moderation, karma (or whatever else you want to call it) - you could open it up to everyone - scientist, laymen and geeks alike - thus you would gradually get a collection of "peers" - composed not only of scientists, but of really smart laymen and geeks, giving you feedback on the papers, etc - those same laymen and geeks would also be able to set up nodes of their own, if they are so inclined - allowing the various garage scientists to collaborate as well, amongst each other, and with the more "monied" scientists (both corporate and grant-funded researchers).

    Does this sound like something that would be useful? Does it sound reasonable? Does it sound like something that could work?

    Comments?

    Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
  • Yes - you and the other poster have a good point, and one that I missed - the research and materials involved _do_ cost a lot, and thus the actual paper and publication is probably only a small fraction of all that.

    As far as moderation by "smart geeks" and "laymen" is concerned, the way I would want it structured would be the more "insightful", etc type posts, the higher the karma (with no karma capping), and you would gain higher status for the review. Established practitioners could come in with a preset karma, while laymen/geeks would come in with zero karma, and have to work their way up. Hopefully some of those with the highest karma (ie, the scientists) would moderate those with bad ideas, suggestions, etc - down, and hopefully some of those would be meta-moderators as well.

    Just because someone is considered a layman (ie, doesn't have phd tacked onto the end of their name), doesn't mean their intelligence and ability to reason is any less than someone who isn't - it just means they have gone down a different path in life. I am not saying all laymen are fit to review such papers - but I would wager a fair percentage are smarter than you would think (though having a background in the subject being considered would be much more helpful than just being book taught).

    Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
  • Which is one of the reasons why I suggested a web ring approach, with a central server run by the NFS - there would be the archive.

    Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
  • What's next, patenting lab coats? (Ok, a bit extreme, but you get the point)

    Not all that extreme, apparently [delphion.com]

  • What's irritating is that you can have >30 karma, and the lame filter will still reject your posts.
    ------
  • by Megasphaera Elsdenii ( 54465 ) on Thursday July 26, 2001 @02:00AM (#2193275)
    Journals do actually do quite a bit of work. You submit a paper to them.

    No they dont, not given the amount of money that they get for free. I happen to know the operation of a leading title in bioinformatics. Apart from the editors and reviewers, it is run by 1 (one) person, the secretary.

    Then they need to decide if they want to publish it, first of all. That takes some expertise to begin with.

    Which is done by the editors and reviewers, who are not paid. Editors (who choose the reviewers, and who under whose auspicies the paper finally is published) do get paid but only a litte, as being an editor is more a prestige thing (and rightly so) than anything else.

    All of this takes effort, and much of it is non-trivial.

    On the contrary; most of it is trivial in the scientifici world . You simply can't compare it to another, say commercial effort.

    Scientists could get together and run their own free journals with quality research in them, but that's that much less time spent doing science.

    Firstly, it seems to have worked out quite well in the physics community. Secondly, ask any department what they'd rather have: the current situtation, or shifting $10,000 from the library to the research budget + free access to all literature in exchange for a bit of work to get/keep the free literature initiative going ... go ahead, I'm waiting :-)

    The big question, indeed, is why the researchers and libraries in Medicin and Biology (and humanities etc.) haven't gotten their act together in the way the physicicts have ... but it's coming.

  • I used to be a representative on the Library committee for the science library at Oxford University. The annual subscription to journals cost almost one million pounds (I think this was in 1995), with the subscription costs for some specialist journals as much as 10,000 UKP per year. I am fairly sure that the median price for printed journals at any reasonably well-stocked science library will be well over $200 per year.
  • There is also a significant risk for each individual researcher participating in the boycott. The new "free" journal has not yet an established reputation, and papers published in there might not be valued as highly as papers published in traditional journals. By shunning the traditional journals, the researchers deprive themselves of recognized publications, which could have an impact on grants, on diplomas (for young researchers), etc. And probably, many will (understandibly) consider their scolarity, their career or their lab's funding more important then some political cause. And, the less people participate in the boycott, the more likely such adverse consequences will be, which will again dimish the number of participants...
  • Hey, if you can patent the software for silicon, why can't you patent the software for cells? :-(
  • I would advise scientists in disciplines other than physics and applied math to check out the arXiv.org [arxiv.org] website and e-print archive.

    This was started by a lone eccentric^H^H^H^H visionary genius named Paul Ginsparg, a physicist employed at Los Alamos National Laboratory (yes, tax dollars at work!), in 1991. The site is nearly self-maintaining and serves up hundreds of thousands of e-prints a year to physicists and mathematicians worldwide. For those who are interested, this report [arxiv.org] gives Dr. Ginsparg's view of the archive circa 1996.

    The New York Times had a nice article about the archive on May 1 of this year (now only accessible via pay at the "Premium Archive"... how's that for irony?) and how it has levelled the scientific playing field for researchers in less-developed countries who cannot afford premium journal subscriptions.

    The most important point, though, is that this free e-print service coexists with the high-subscription journals (Phys Rev; Science; Nature; ApJ) that serve these communities. Young researchers bucking for tenure submit to the prestigious journal... and also to arXiv.org. That way their research gets both respect and the broadest possible distribution.

    This sort of compromise is going to be harder to achieve, I think, in fields where publishing is an even bigger-money business (MoBio comes to mind). But it does demonstrate that full-scale war is not the only alternative to all-out capitulation to commercial interests.

    -Renard

  • In the article it notes that the actual archiving of the papers will be done by PubMedCentral. There would be no costs to any participating journals. Nonetheless the journals (absent a few exceptions) are refusing to take part.

    In any case, there are great advantages to collecting all of the literature at one site - you can do better search and retrieval, and enable systematic cross-literature studies. Even if the journals did make their own archives publicly accessible we would probably want to collect the literature in some noncommercial space.

    Nobody's asking for something for nothing. But when you've done the research, and payed to have it published, you'd like to think you could make it available in a free public forum (if you wanted to).

    -Renard

  • such a bloody problem? First off wasn't the whole point of the internet that infomation could be shared - easily? And again, this was in a day and age where BIG IRON ruled. Now with commodity equipment it should be no problem to host this stuff on university, personal, WHEREVER sites. And as far as "publishing", I do believe that was the reason for SGML and heirs, no?

    And if it's dead-tree format that's the problem, I'm sure the same folks who convenienly print paper format of "personal poetry" would be just as willing to accept bucks from the sci community to print dead-tree copies of whatever "thesis/theory-of-the-day" is desired.

    This could have the desired effect of cutting out those useless publishers- I'm hoping so anyway..
  • The question of THE prominent scientific journal depends what your field is. Many are so narrow that there are really only one or two journals dealing with the subject at all, although there's always the possibility of getting your pet paper published in something more general.

    For example, if I wrote a document about the use of quantum dots in advanced semiconductor electronics, I'd be considering getting it published in, say, Semiconductor Physics, Quantum Electronics and Optoelectronics. If that one fell through, I might rewrite it to get a more generalist angle and then send it to the American Journal of Physics.

    In case anybody's wondering why scientists spend so much time trying to get published, it's not just ego. Many universities are very strict about the minimum number of publications they'll accept from their researchers - friends of mine tell me that the Uni atmosphere has become terribly competitive, since the department directors decided to evaluate employees based almost entirely on the number of publications.

    Furthermore, it's a totally cruel world out there. Whatever you've heard about caring, sharing academics, it's only half true. Most people would like to work that way, but they're constrained to hide their information jealously to avoid copying by other academics. I've even heard professors asking their PhD students to lie about their current progress, to misdirect enquirers, and so on.

    This sort of thing seriously holds back progress, along with the 'No cooperation without a 60% share in the winnings' attitude of many research groups. Biological research suffers terribly from this (and with it, artificial intelligence - nobody can afford to get the data required to make anything better than intelligent guesses).

  • by tokengeekgrrl ( 105602 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:35PM (#2193307)
    Excerpt from the article: Currently, Eisen said, "We volunteer the material, the reviewing, the editing, and then we pay to get access to it"--a process he likened to a midwife who delivers a baby and then charges its parents to visit it. In response, the initiative has proposed that publishers should be paid to produce the manuscript, but should not own the material after publication.

    Unfortunately, this type of outright ownership by publishers and distributors of other people's work is quite common. Many writers, whether they be scientists or freelance columnists or journalists, are forced to sign draconian contracts where in order to get their work published, they are forced to relinquish all rights to it.

    Hopefully, the Public Library of Science Initiative will have an effect and take hold, starting a new trend in publishing practices.

    - tokengeekgrrl

  • I won't go on, but you get the idea. All the costs you mentioned are covered by grant money, and as for the time, it's part of the job - it's like a secretary bitching because he/she has to type a letter and answer the phone.
    No, the point is that the publisher does not pay for this, so the publisher should not own it for the next few decades.
  • There was a good essay about this in the May issue of Communications of the ACM: http://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/journals/cacm/200 1-44-5/p25-apt/p25-apt.pdf [acm.org] Ironically, you must be a member to view it, but kudos to the CACM for publishing it.

    Among the interesting bits was this:

    Instead of inventing some economic models, it is much better to rely on public information provided by those who run successful FSP journals. In [4] Minton and Wellman provide a detailed analysis of the economic matters involved in the production of JAIR based on their five years of experience. They find that "the only significant cost involved in pro-ducing the journal is the cost of the review and editing process. Thus, the universities and research labs that employ JAIR's editors effectively subsidize the journal by supporting this work." In turn, Louis, Schneider, and Rehmann [3] published an account of the costs of running Documenta Mathe-matica based on their four years of experience. In their detailed analysis they reach a revealing amount of $210 per year ("including hidden costs"). So, not surprisingly, Rehmann wrote to me: "Our journal was never sponsored by anybody. Needless to say, the journal is hosted on my PC, which I have anyway."

    3. Louis, A.K., Schneider, P. and Rehmann, U. Documenta Mathementa (Aug. 31, 1999); www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/~rehmann/bericht-e ng. html.

    4. Minton S. and Wellman, M.P. JAIR at five. AI Magazine, 20, 3 (Sum-mer 1999); www.isi.edu/sims/minton/papers/jairfive.pdf.

    Also, for those who haven't seen it, take a look at ResearchIndex (CiteSeer), should definitely visit it. See http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs [nec.com] It's really wonderful to be able to see the citations in context--for a good example, see http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/abiteboul97lorel.html [nec.com]-- and browse the documents that are available on the web. Right now it's just computer science, but hopefully all research papers will eventually be on the web.
  • Actually, the IEEE wants to own the copyright on everything in their publications. [ieee.org] But they let authors put the material on the author's web server, under some restrictions.

    Contrast this with the normal practice when a freelancer sells an article to a magazine. Usually, the writer only sells the first serial publication rights [slashdot.org], giving the magazine just enough rights to publish the article. The author retains all the other rights, including the right to republish elsewhere.

    When I discussed this with a working magazine writer some years back, she was amazed at the lousy deal academic periodicals give their authors. You get a better deal when the magazine pays you.

  • Actually, 2000 is a pretty accurate survey, statistically, if they are picked completely randomly.

    I would, however, like to see the original survey to verify the numbers.

    -= rei =-
  • Well, at least *one* person caught it!

    I swear, I never expected to be taken seriously, let alone have people agree with me!!

    -= rei =-
  • You know, I didn't plan on being taken seriously when I made that post, let alone have people actually agree with me ;)

    My ranking of people in general, and more specifically slashdotters, has just gone down a few notches ;)

    How could people honestly believe that modern science is all fake? When we're in such a skyrocketing technological boom? I think the problem is actually more of a growing education gap. I think most people would, rather than believe a scientist who knows what they're talking about in a particular field, to quote Troy McClure, "just ask this scientician!". Ask someone who will give them an answer that fits into their concept of the world better, instead of someone who's actually done extensive amounts of research built on extensive amounts of research, ad nauseum, every step confirming the previous.

    The scientific method is what got us to where we are, people! Its had a few failings, but millions apon millions of successes, each confirmed over and over.

    -= rei =-
  • Um, how does that work?

    If you don't believe in it because of a soul, then why do you?

    Picture a week-old embryo. It doesn't even have neurons (~2 weeks), let alone synapses (~1.5 mo), let alone remotely complex synapses (~2.5 mo), let alone human-level complexity synapses (arbitrary), let alone measurably unique human level complexity synapses (arbitrary). It is the mind that makes us who we are, not the body. There is no mind.

    Its obvious that people don't have an objection to killing human cells - we do it all the time.

    Its obvious that people don't have an objection to destroying unique DNA combinations - we do *that* all the time.

    Why is it suddenly that, when we combine the two, people have a problem? It isn't DNA that makes us who we are - it is our *mind*.

    BTW, if you're pro-life: never have sex again. Seriously. 60% of fertilized embryos never implant. So, odds are pretty good you're committing "murder".

    -= rei =-
  • by Jagasian ( 129329 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @05:10PM (#2193322)
    Academic research is an ongoing process played out by thousands of people. They all give to the common good, so why not take it a step furthur and have each researcher run a Freenet node? Most universities already supply computers for each researcher or for each department, and these computers are typically hooked up to a broadband dedicated net connection. Freenet seems like a perfect match.

    In addition, an open review board could be formed, similar to the open group that develops Debian. Also, just like Debian has standards for packages entering into unstable, testing, and stable distributions, the same could be done for research papers in this Freenet scholarly research paper archive, so that material available in the "stable" archive is assured to be of high quality and passed through strict peer-review.

    Its important to form a system that is not only open and free, but the system should also allow smaller research departments to chip in (run a freenet node, help review papers, and submit new research papers). Linux is free and open, it supplies the proper networking capabilities, document editing apps, and more.
  • The shameful thing isn't that authors have to sign contracts - it's that in the case of scientific journals the authors aren't being compensated and the works that they essentially donate are being restricted.

    In a real sense it's worse than that. Science simply doesn't work if the scientists never exhange their ideas; it's much like journalism in the sense that gathering the data is pointless unless it's disseminated in a timely fashion. This is true not only in the sense that publication is important to the authors careers (which it certainly is) but also in that the research doesn't do anyone any good unless the results are made public.

    The publishers have figured out that the authors are eager to publish and they can get them to give up their rights in exchange for getting the work published. And then they can turn around and charge outrageous prices for the work because it's critical for other scientists to be able to read it. As long as most of the journals stick together and insist on those rules, the scientists have no choice; they must publish and they must read, so they have to accept the publishers' terms.

    The net (and particularly the web) is putting a big kink in that. The physicists have already banded together and forced the publishers to accept that things have changed. Now it's the biologist's turn. If they can create something as powerful as xxx.lanl.gov [lanl.gov], they can get somewhere.

    Karma below 50 again. Thanks Karma Kap.

  • I remember reading many years ago that for many publications, the subscription price is pretty much the cost of the postage to send you the journals, all the other costs are covered by the advertisers (Popular Science, etc). If you have a scientific journal with little to no ads, then the only source of revenue is subscriptions.

    That's not really relevant to scientific journals, though. Subscription prices to journals are much, much higher than prices for popular magazines like Popular Science. Subscription prices are routinely over $50 per year for monthly journals and $200 for weekly journals, and 5 to 20 times that for institutional subscriptions. Most journals are scarcely free from advertizing, either, and it's generally well targeted advertizing for expensive items- the kind that's most likely to generate really big revenue. Plus many journals add per-page charges to the authors as an additional source of money. In fact, some journals (PNAS is one I particularly remember) are legally required to print "ADVERTIZEMENT" on each page containing an article because their page charges are high enough that the articles are legally classified as paid advertizements!

    It's not as though the publishers are crying for money. Big publishers like Elesvier are very profitable (Elesvier's pre-tax proft margin last year was 25%) and are hardly crying for money. Somehow non-profit publishers manage to put out their journals for substantially less- even when they contract with one of the bigger journals to do the actual physical publishing. There's a reason that the big, for-profit publishers are starting new journals very rapidly; they wouldn't be doing so if they didn't think they'd be profitable.

    Karma below 50 again. Thanks Karma Kap.

  • by rgmoore ( 133276 ) <glandauer@charter.net> on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @04:32PM (#2193326) Homepage

    I also work in molecular biology (or biochemistry; the line is a bit fuzzy) and I've had essentially the same issues- except for one publication. I helped to write several units for Protocols in Protein Science and was then completely bowled over when it turned out that in exchange for turning over their copyrights, authors received:

    • A per-article and per-page payment for their units,
    • A free copy of the book- which is very useful and normally fairly expensive- for each co-author, and
    • Free updates as long as the unit remains in the book (in exchange for updating the units as needed)

    I thought that was a pretty good deal, even if my employer did make me sign over the check because the writing was done on company time; at least the money went into an account that was under my boss's control rather than into the general pot. OTOH, those chapters were the one piece of writing I've done where the publisher solicited the authors for work rather than the other way around, so the apparently had to offer incentives to get people to agree.

    Karma below 50 again. Thanks Karma Kap.

  • by rgmoore ( 133276 ) <glandauer@charter.net> on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @05:38PM (#2193327) Homepage

    No, no, no! If they read about something on a public forum, the original publisher could bring forward the date at which it was submitted as proof of prior art. There's no reason that publishing on a web site would be treated any differently than publishing in a book, provided that you could demonstrate a date of publication. In any case, if they really wanted to patent it, they could apply for the patent before submitting it. Hell, most physicists currently make their articles that are under review available on preprint servers (like http://xxx.lanl.gov [lanl.gov] and nobody's going around and stealing their ideas. The web was invented by physicists specifically to make it easy for them to make their work available before it was formally published on paper.

    This is the key point that so many people are missing. We have very strong evidence that what the biologists are requesting would work becuause the physicists have already tried essentially the same thing and made it work. There's no good reason to think that the result would be any different in biology.

    Karma below 50 again. Thanks Karma Kap.

  • by Apogee ( 134480 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:36PM (#2193331)
    I think the situation is even worse than what Michael Eisen said it to be in the article:

    Currently, Eisen said, "We volunteer the material, the reviewing, the editing, and then we pay to get access to it"--a process he likened to a midwife who delivers a baby and then charges its parents to visit it. "

    It is worse:

    As a researcher, you do your research (your money and time), then you write it up in a suitable format for the journal you consider submitting it to (your time) and the guidelines to authors are sometimes quite intricate to get right. Next, you submit it to the journal, maybe even by FedEx or similar (your money). After the editor receives the manuscript, he is going to send it out to peers to have it reviewed (your peers, i.e. your time). If the paper is accepted for publication, the journal will then do the layout and insert the figures etc (their time). Then, after you OK the galley proofs, it will be published. For this, you have to pay page charges (up to $90 a page, color figures cost extra). You will have to order reprints, another $700 maybe. And your work is published in the prestigious journal, of which you will need a subscription (quite expensive) to view the results.

    Summing it up, the researchers spend a lot of time, money and good-will on the publications, whereas the involvement of the journal publisher is not that great after all.

    I work in the molecular biology field myself (which the article is relating to) and we have often jokingly considered opening up a journal, since this is a way to make money without much effort ... everything is done and paid for by others. While I am sure journals aren't exactly pots of gold, the distribution of who does what and who pays for what is a little odd.

  • its the editing and peer-review process that become difficult, by that I mean you need to pay people to edit, and orginize the peer-review process.
    It would e nice if the colleges supplied the funds to run such an orginization, because, as you pointed out, the actual 'publishing' is trivial.
    I wonder if there is something else that goes on, because you would think a competitive market would bring the price of those subscriptions down.
  • by Wesley Felter ( 138342 ) <wesley@felter.org> on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:37PM (#2193336) Homepage
    AFAIK, scientists aren't asking for their work to be copyright-free, just available without paying.
  • I agree with the researchers' intent, but I fear that it could backfire. The worst thing that can happen, if the journal and the initiative fails, is that the boycott could essentially prevent scientists from being able to access each other's works online.

    But somehow, I don't think that will happen. The market for journals is essentially its authors; the authors benefit more from a journal business model such as this. As long as the academic community is aware of their options, this should succeed, and the other publishers will have to fall in line, or find themselves without any submissions left to publish!
  • This idea is becoming a necessity which will not be abandoned. Journals themselves make this completely unavoidable. The physics community (probably because of their technical background) has long used postscript documents as a way of distributing and obtaining papers. Libraries, who are often the ones who are forced to handle the real costs, have fought this by using interlibrary loans and other sharing techniques.

    The ONLY way for this to work is for established, respected scientists to publish major works in this fashion. Us young squrits, well understanding the issues at hand, have no impact on the way the scientific community operates. In a field where publications are your reputation, where you publish matters. This must gain the air of respectability. That will take time.

    That time will be taken, however, because of the abuse journals have made of their reputations. I have faith in that. How long will be a question, but if some big name schools put their weight behind this it will help. I await developments with excitement.
  • A while back, there was a story [law.com] of parents patenting their children. This was where they and other parents of children with pseudoxanthoma elasticum ("PXE") started a tissue and sample bank that would help researchers to perform research on PXE. As a conditions of use, the researchers were required to share data and to provide the people involved in the tissue bank to discounts on drugs discovered using the samples.

    This is another way to free the data provided by others in an altruistic manner.

  • Unless their solution has some form of serious paper rating system (sorry, slashcode won't do it) and/or peer review guidelines, having a free for all form of publishing will be very bad news for science.

    There are many more wanna be scientists, pseudo scientists and profiteers out there than real hard core scientists. The ones that really contribute to human knowledge.

    I know information wants to be free, but we need to remember that these pseudo scientists want free publicity. How will we konw where the well written, well tested, well reviewed papers are? It's already hard enough to read your email with all the spam.

    These are just my thoghts of course.
  • Seriously, don't you think (or better yet, hope) that we researchers have better things to do than crawl around libraries for hours on end? It's called "productivity."

    Here here! I'm greatly in favor of increased productivity in my research environment. Like when I "productively" lurk around Slashdot, instead of finishing that paper I should be working on....


  • People, on an induhivual basis, can't remember to back up their Great American Novel on a $0.25 floppy disk... so I don't believe for a minute that a LARGE group of people will be any better about backing up responsibly.

    Academic environments are especially prone to political infighting and committee-itis. Based on my experience in that scene, all the publications would rot on one unsafe temporary server because the Inter-University Technology Search Committee would spend 8 years evaluating what OS to use for the backup system.

    Wish I knew what the solution was. Despite my libertarian leanings I sort of want to get the government involved. They already have stewardship of natural resources; the fruits of our collective research is a national treasure too, of sorts.
  • Tetrahedron Letters is crazy expensive too... I think I heard $2500+.

    I'm in the publishing field, and for the life of me I don't know why it has to be that expensive. For example, I can print 5000 copies of a 64 page book, with a slick color cover, for about $0.85 each. Most of that is the cover. Say you go to a plain cover, but improve the paper quality dramatically, to that archival-quality stuff. Say this increases your overall expenses by three times. (Beats me, but that seems like an outside figure.) OK, you'd need more than 64 pages, too. But still... how much can each freaking copy cost to make? A few bucks at the most.

    Anyway, the point is you can print and distribute a journal for a hell of a lot less than is being done. In fact, it is so affordable that I don't know why independent groups of scientists don't do this. Maybe they just don't know how relatively easy it would be. Get a $100 copy of PageMaker and put your grad students on it. Boom, there you go, your university is a publisher. labor is by far the biggest problem... not the cost of the journal.

    Why don't the big state school systems do something like this? There should be a University of California Office of Publications that puts out THE UC science journals, and provides free peer review and publication to other qualified university scholars.

    As part of their duties, all profs at all universities should be made to participate in peer review or research articles, if they aren't already. (I've been out of higher ed for a while.)

  • by cvd6262 ( 180823 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @04:27PM (#2193351)
    I don't think this boycott has the high profile in the scientific community we'd like.

    Yes, it does.

    I'm working on my Ph.D., and I can tell you that many, many professors are aware of this. However, just like the Dmitry situation, they are either too lazy, or too stuck in their ways to really care.

    This issue was brought up in a forum and one of the faculty asked, "If journals are free, what would motivate scientists to publish?" We answered him by asking another question: "What motivates them now to publish? Not money."

  • by jungd ( 223367 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:30PM (#2193360)
    perhaps someone should write to those scientists who do publish in the publications not meeting the demands, to make them aware of the issues.
    I don't think this boycott has the high profile in the scientific community we'd like.
  • by hillct ( 230132 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:30PM (#2193361) Homepage Journal
    This is the sort of thing that you knew would have to happen. It's hard to day weather this iteration will be successful but eventually such a move will be nessecery in the scientific community.

    If you missed the discussion, the journal Nature [nature.com] has an ongoing discussion on online scientific publication [nature.com].

    --CTH
  • Assuming you don't qualify for any of the discounts, one year of Science [science.com] costs $250US. You also have the option of paying $5US for a *single* article on their website.

    Look here for prices: https://aaas.realtimepub.com/membership/new_member _setup.asp [realtimepub.com]
  • > perhaps someone should write to those scientists
    > who do publish in the publications not meeting
    > the demands, to make them aware of the issues.
    > I don't think this boycott has the high profile
    > in the scientific community we'd like.

    Rob Kirby has a list [berkeley.edu] comparing mathematics journal prices. (Although some of the data is somewhat ('97) old now.) In particular, there is an excellent comparison of the (estimated) costs involved of producing the Pacific Journal of Mathematics (published by UCI) and Inventiones Mathematicae (published by Springer-Verlag).

    I think most people in the mathematics community are aware of the issues here. However, certainly in the UK, there are far more pressing factors that determine which journals one submits to. Firstly, there's the obvious implications for one's career and promotion prospects: a paper in Annals of Mathematics or Inventiones looks better on a C.V. than a paper in some random journal no-one's heard of. Secondly, in the UK each member of staff in every university department is assessed for the quality of its research output (this is the dreaded Research Assessment Exercise [rae.ac.uk]). The ranking of each department (on the slightly bizarre scale of 1,2,3a,3b,4,5,5*) determines the level of research income that the government will provide. The quality of research is primarily assessed by each member of staff submitting their 4 best published papers over the last 5 years to be peer-reviewed by the RAE panel. They obviously can't read every paper, and so it's important for each department to submit as many papers in as many prestigous journals as possible: too few and your department could be closed down! Each submitted paper has to be put into the correct category: peer-reviewed journal, refereed conference proceedings, non-peer-refereed proceedings, etc. What is interesting is that refereed electronic journals are counted separately to traditional refereed print journals. The RAE panel claims that the two will be treated equally, but given that the panels usually comprise of the more senior figures in the discipline (hence, older and more adverse to innovations like electronic journals), and given the huge sums of money involved, it's regarded as foolish to submit papers to purely electronic journals in case they are perceived as being of lower quality.

    I - and many others - would much prefer to publish in electronic journals, or to journals which are published by the academic organisations, but the potential career and financial risks are just too great.

  • by kriemar ( 247929 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:37PM (#2193369)
    I've often wondered if it weren't possible to modify slash code or whatever kuro5hin uses to start an online web site.

    If you think about it, kuro5hin's model is very similar to that of scientific publishing: peer-reviewed submissions. If you replace "news stories" with "papers" you get a peer-reviewed online journal. Make posts abstracts, include a link to html/ps/pdf forms of papers, and there you go.
  • front parent's sig:
    actual /. error "This comment has been submitted already, 276695 hours , 47 minutes ago. No need to try again."

    I've gotten that one a few times too! It always happens when I try to post, that new 20 second waiting-period stops me, and then I click back and try again. A couple times I was outright unable to post (kept getting the thousands of hours error) without clicking "reply" again and starting over. nobody ever said slashcode wasn't buggy... ;-)

    ___
  • overrated? wtf? how the fuck do these people get mod points?

    ___
  • Public universities subscribe to thousands of journals. I don't think the journal publishers should be forced to create and pay for web sites just so the scientist doesn't have to leave his desk to get a paper. They can go to the library like everyone else has been doing for the last 100 or more years.

    It seems that even some scientists are not immune from becoming whiny and lazy as a result of the internet making things more readily available.
  • by nanojath ( 265940 ) on Thursday July 26, 2001 @05:57AM (#2193381) Homepage Journal
    While a free and searchable database is a fine idea, I think the publishers of conventional journals are right to be leery of these demands. Scientific publishing is not exactly the cash cow of the publishing industry. How many university libraries would stop carrying a significant number of journals if their content could bne accessed on-line on demand?

    What's missing from these demands is any guarantee for the conventional publishers that they will be protected from the inevitable loss in revenue that will result from having their content freely available. Scientific articles are not like MP3s: a scientist does not read an article, say "that was great" and go buy the journal. For the most part, either a person or institution subscribes or they don't. The demands of this group are unreasonable. Science publishing is a high cost activity requiring a preponderance of expertise in the editorial staff compared to other forms of periodical publishing, and it does not have the same acces to advertising revenue.

    I'm usually on the other side of the business versus freedom debate but get real: It's getting hard enough to get industry or the government to pay for actual research. Someone has to pay the cost of publishing scientific articles. The editors made the right choice, and its up to the The Public Library of Science Initiative to prove that journals can be sustainably published under a free content model.

  • I hope that they succeed. It seems to me that the scientists have a good point here - the current system is pretty outrageous.

    On a side note, there's another step they could take. Have each person who's signed the letter send a letter of cancelation to every magazine, such as Science, that they subscribe to. In the letter they should state that their reason for cancelation is due to the magazine's failure to meet the demands. If that many scientists dropped their subscriptions, the magazines and journals would have to listen, because then it truly affects their bottom line.

    In matters of $, it's often better to let your money do the talking instead of your mouth.
  • by bryan1945 ( 301828 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @03:35PM (#2193383) Journal
    The scientists want the articles to be kept free and open electronically. If they mean kept on the web by the publishing journal, then I disagree. The journal should not have to foot that bill if they do not want to. Now, if they mean that some site should be allowed to post the articles for free access by the public, I'm all for it.

    I'll assume they mean the latter. Overall, this is a disturbing trend in science. In the past science tended to prove theories, practice on applied science, etc. Engineers tended to find practical applications, which then would be patented. Now we have humans gene sequences being patented. What's next, patenting lab coats? (Ok, a bit extreme, but you get the point)
  • jerrytcow misses the point when he says it is not "your" money.

    Ultimately, you have a limited budget, and if you did not spend the money fed-ex'ing the manuscript, you might spend it on equipment or upgrade something.

    Equally, when you use your time to format material just the way the journa wants it, it is time you could spend doing research (or having a life).

    Many researchers are not doing it as a job, but are students on a stipend (legally a different thing), and i know of several phd students who have had to stump up for expenses towards the end of their project when the cash starts to run out

    m
  • here's an interesting idea - why dont they try to get papers published in major newspapers, like say the nyt and washington post, etc. they could add a whole science section to their papers, which would probably increase readership among scientists, it would encourage scientists to write in a language more accessible to the public, and it would put the scientific journal monopoly out of business. obviously, yes, the papers would want to do the same thing the journals do, but if atleast one major paper accepts the terms proposed by the scientists, others will soon follow..
  • by multicsfan ( 311891 ) on Wednesday July 25, 2001 @04:43PM (#2193389)
    To play the Devil's advocate:

    They have cost of publication, printing is not free.

    They have to cooridinate all the submissions, the reviews, track subscriptions, layout every issue, find advertisers (if the journal has any), pay people for the above, do all the accounting, billing, etc.

    Pay postage/shipping.

    I remember reading many years ago that for many publications, the subscription price is pretty much the cost of the postage to send you the journals, all the other costs are covered by the advertisers (Popular Science, etc). If you have a scientific journal with little to no ads, then the only source of revenue is subscriptions.

    In the electronic world, the cost of servers, maintenance of servers, system administration, web design, bandwidth may replace the physical print costs, but all the others are still there. You still have layout (page design), and equivalents of the other expenses. A college or university may publish a journal and put it on the web at no charge to viewers, but those expenses are being paid by someone. It may come from the endowment, it may be part of the tuition you pay as a student, it may be a government grant (tax money), it may be a grant from a company (consumers who buy the products).

    Remember: TANSTAAFL

    It may seem free, but somewhere, someone is paying for it. You may not be able to determine who, but someone is. That dime you found on the sidewalk was lost by someone else.

  • I think the folks behind the Public Library of Science movement are attempting to draw a line in the sand on this issue, so their perspective is intentionally extreme. I know that information wants to be free, but in the interests of balance I feel compelled to point out that the current nonprofit journal publishing system is not necessarily greedy and exploitative. Science magazine, for instance, is published at substantial cost by a nonprofit organization called the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) [aaas.org]. When you subscribe to Science you join the association. The membership dues and the advertising revenue from the magazine pay for a wide range of activities that are of tremendous benefit to science and society.

    As paper publishing becomes less and less relevant, I think that it's going to get harder and harder for journals and their sponsoring organizations to come by revenue. Making it even harder by clamoring for completely free and unrestricted access to high-quality peer-reviewed material is at least partially a bad thing, isn't it? Somebody's got to foot the bill, and journals and their sponsoring societies add a lot of value to the science community.

    Final note: Science has adopted a compromise position on this issue; issues older than one year will be freely available on the journal's website.

  • There are a few problems with your approach. First, you're forgetting about step 0: conduct research. That's the REALLY expensive part. Often, a paper is the result of a year's or more worth of work during which time your department is breathing down your neck to publish to make them look good, and when they're not, your corporate and/or government sponsors are. Second, I certainly wouldn't want laymen or even smart geeks reviewing my work. When you submit a paper to a journal, you generally also include a list of suggested reviewers. They may or may not actually be used, but you want people who are familiar enough with the field to understand if you have a good idea or not. I've reviewed papers for journals before that, if you told a layman about it, he's probably think it was a great idea. As an expert, however, I was able to recognize errors in their method, lack of rigor, better solutions, PRIOR ART, etc. /.'ers may be smart, but when was the last time you picked up a copy of Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems and really understood one of their articles on parallel beamforming algorithms? Laymen, geeks, and, yes, even /.'ers have no business reviewing papers on subjects in which they are not experts.
  • Toy stores sell thousands of abaci. It disgusts me that scientists have become lazy and whiny and demand access to fancy US$500 solid-state electronic 'computers' to perform calculations. Abaci were perfectly accepted for centuries. Why should institutions (and by extension, governments) have to pay for these lavish luxuries when all that's necessary is available for much, much less.

    Seriously, don't you think (or better yet, hope) that we researchers have better things to do than crawl around libraries for hours on end? It's called "productivity."

    But if you want to give me $10 for an abacus, I'll sure as heck take it. ;-)

  • If someone wants to support the AAAS and their activities, that's fine. I don't see why people should have to do so by paying artificially high costs for access to research results.

    The IEEE, for example, publishes a number of journals that are essential reading for researchers in their areas. Foreign engineers have to pay for access to those journals just like US engineers. Yet, the IEEE effectively uses revenues from those journal publications, as well as inflated membership numbers, to lobby before Congress against the interests of many of their readers.

  • Many people already put up their papers as "prepreints" or "extended versions" on the web and submit them to archives, strictly speaking in violation of the copyright agreements they signed at publication.

    Another thing you can do is simply refuse to do free reviewing for journals and conferences that have the most restrictive copyright policies. Don't kid yourself: reviewing work doesn't make any significant difference on your resume, it takes a lot of time to do well, and you are basically doing unpaid work for a publisher that's profiting handsomely (or some big "non-profit" organization that runs through large amounts of money). It is the editors that are in the hot seat if they don't get reviewers, and they are also the ones that can perhaps cause their publishers to alter their policies.

  • The IEEE has been lobbying on the issue of H1B visas. Many foreigners feel that the IEEE position was characterized by narrow self-interest of US engineers, to the detriment of both foreign born professionals and the US economy as a whole. US engineers are, of course, fully justified in engaging in those kinds of lobbying activities. What is not acceptable from my point of view is that the IEEE effectively uses membership numbers, subscription fees, and membership dues from inviduals who are IEEE members purely for scientific/technical reasons to support such activities. IEEE professional communications and IEEE lobbying activities should be two separate organizations with separate funding and separate membership lists.
  • How much would it cost to compile and stamp out a DVD with all of the online articles you can find on it? It would probably hold most everything available today (minus pictures, maybe).

    To address your modification concerns, do an MD5 hash on it and chisel the hashcode into the floor of the Library of Congress. Sell the DVD to the public at cost; there probably would be thousands of takers. There would almost certainly be a few disks still around 200 years from now. (They might need to be special gold DVDs due to reports of old aluminum CDs rotting already).

  • In the EE and CE fields, the main journal publisher is the IEEE [ieee.org]. I'm pretty sure that they do not claim exclusive rights to publish research, or if they do, everyone in the field ignores it. The result is that many researchers (myself included) post all their publications on their web pages, which increases access and exposure to important works in the field. Furthermore, it permits free document search engines based on these web posts, such as Citeseer [nec.com]. The net result is, if you take any IEEE publication, and type the title in your favourite search engine, you will find a link to a free copy of the paper about 30-40% of the time (and this proportion is growing). I can't imagine a scientific discipline in which this wasn't done.

  • scientists aren't asking for their work to be copyright-free

    Of course not! As a scientist I am very happy to let anyone peruse my results for free (in fact I encourage it), but I want to maintain control over how my results are presented. This is because I want to retain control over changes to my work -- I don't want someone taking my work, making trivial changes, removing my name as an author, and claiming credit. The system of citation is the accepted means by which scientific work is modified and advanced, which gives credit to the truly original and fundamental works in the field while preserving them unchanged. It's difficult to maintain such a system if copyright is completely abandoned.

  • Thanks a lot. I don't mean to beat this to death, but I'd be surprised if the IEEE ever changed its policy. Strictly speaking, the journals are published by a sponsoring technical society (not directly by the IEEE), and the technical societies are organized and run mostly by the academics who do the publishing. It seems to work quite well.
  • So scientists may be able to control their own work - while artists have yet to solve the problem for themselves.

    I have a hunch they're going to succeed. Fred Durst would be proud.
  • In part .. The Public Library of Science wrote in an open letter [publiclibr...cience.org]

    We recognize that the publishers of our scientific journals have a legitimate right to a fair financial return for their role in scientific communication. We believe, however, that the permanent, archival record of scientific research and ideas should neither be owned nor controlled by publishers, but should belong to the public, and should be freely available through an international online public library.

    As a social scientist I agree fully with this stance. We cannot leave the open publications of intellectual property "scientific journals" in the hands of publishers. It's a form of censorship IMHO.
  • Well, Rei, I need science. You need science. The people down the road need science. Granted, there are scientists cooking their data to suit their agendas, but at least other scientists can dispute corrupt data with their own. Would you prefer to live in the good old days when all the knowledge of the world came from Aristotle and anybody who challenged orthodoxy was a servant of Satan fit only to burn? So scientists with an agenda are trying to tell people that there's hole in the ozone layer. I hear people like Rush claiming that human embryos have souls. Imagine that: an embryo lacks a sentient mind and a set of instincts, but we're supposed to believe that it has a soul. The worst of it is that this particular idea isn't being propounded by a scientist with data that might prove his theory correct, it's being pushed on us be people who believe in a supernatural Creator who exists outside this universe.
    ******
    Matthew Lovelace Graybosch

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." - Bert Lantz

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