Archive for February, 2006

Dublin Riots

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

While driving around Ireland on a wedding-location-scouting trip, we started receiving texts talking about riots in Dublin; I texted a friend, and got a reply along these lines: “Celtic-topped scobes
run riot through O’Connell St, torching cars in Nassau street, hospitalising cops and Charlie Bird. madness!”

I thought he was joking, but nope. A load of IRA-slogan-shouting scumbags really had been allowed to run riot — with paving stones of all things left unsecured in their midst! — and it quickly got way, way out of hand.

The blog coverage is excellent, with lots of photos. I suggest starting with Indymedia Ireland, these Flickr photos and the links on this weblog. It appears the gardai really fell down on this one.

For what it’s worth, I was in town a few hours later, and the rest of Dublin was trouble-free — just the usual Saturday night goings-on. O’Connell St. was still a rubble-strewn mess when I passed through on Sunday, though.

This post was written by Justin, source: Dublin Riots

How hosting OA/OAI repositories will change libraries

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

Leo Waaijers, From Libraries to ‘Libratories’, First Monday, December 2005. (I check FM for OA-related articles but somehow overlooked this one; I thank Kimmo Kuusela for the reminder.)

Abstract: While the eighties of the last century were a time of local automation for libraries and the nineties the decade in which libraries embraced the Internet and the Web, now is the age in which the big search engines and institutional repositories are gaining a firm footing. This heralds a new era in both the evolution of scholarly communication and its agencies themselves, i.e. the libraries.

Until now libraries and publishers have developed a digital variant of existing processes and products, i.e. catalogues posted on the Web, scanned copies of articles, e–mail notification about acquisitions or expired lending periods, or traditional journals in a digital jacket. However, the new OAI repositories and services based upon them have given rise to entirely new processes and products, libraries transforming themselves into partners in setting up virtual learning environments, building an institution’s digital showcase, maintaining academics’ personal Web sites, designing refereed portals and — further into the future — taking part in organising virtual research environments or collaboratories. Libraries are set to metamorphose into ‘libratories’, an imaginary word to express their combined functions of library, repository and collaboratory. In such environments scholarly communication will be liberated from its current copyright bridle while its coverage will be both broader — including primary data, audiovisuals and dynamic models — and deeper, with cross–disciplinary analyses of methodologies and applications of instruments. Universities will make it compulsory to store in their institutional repositories the results of research conducted within their walls for purposes of academic reporting, review committees, and other modes of clarification and explanation. Big search engines will provide access to this profusion of information and organise its mass customization.

From the body of the paper:

Although we may not know exactly what the future information needs will be of the academic community, i.e. students, teachers and researchers, to me one thing is certain: open access to state–of–the–art knowledge is crucial in order for both research and learning environments to succeed. Limited access, be it the result of either technical or juridical implications, impedes solid growth in the human knowledge base. Put another way, there is no point going to great pains to overcome technological obstacles facing ICT only to come up against the legal copyright barriers. An interesting example here is the Elsevier content stored in the e–Depot of the Netherlands National Library: the costly technological infrastructure required for guaranteeing long–term access to this material is renowned. But in order to enjoy this access one has to travel to the library in The Hague and then possibly stand in a queue, as only one person at a time is allowed access — a replica of the situation in the paper era….Authors have to be convinced that depositing is in their own interest. In doing so it is most important to demystify the issue. For example, they need to be told that current research shows that open access publishing increases the number of citations and hence impact factors, that the Romeo site proves that publishers are gradually giving in on copyrights, that experiences of authors, who formulate their own copyright statements, teach us that publishers accept them, that parallel publishing on the Internet stimulates sales of a book’s paper version — and so on and so forth. A project like the Netherlands’ Cream of Science demonstrates that it is possible to overcome the hurdles and make top authors, even Nobel Prize winners, enthusiastic about placing their work in repositories. It has also shown that so–called objections sometimes amount to no more than librarians’ perceptions of author viewpoints. And that it is occasionally impossible to publish the complete oeuvre of an author simply because his or her publications have become lost. This in itself constitutes another powerful argument for depositing materials in repositories.

source: How hosting OA/OAI repositories will change libraries

More on Perfect 10 and the Google Library project

Sunday, February 26th, 2006
There’s now a Slashdot thread on whether the Perfect 10 decision will hurt the Google Library project.

source: More on Perfect 10 and the Google Library project

Kansas may provide OA to court records

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

A bill in the Kansas State legislature would provide OA to state court records, with the costs to be paid by a small increase in docket fees. The bill has passed the Senate and moved to the House.

PS: This is much better than the plan proposed by the Kansas Supreme Court, which would charge citizens $2 for every online record search.

source: Kansas may provide OA to court records

New Information Commons wiki covers OA issues

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

The Canadian Library Association has launched the Information Commons Wiki. IC Wiki will cover OA issues and already has a strong page on Canadian OA Initiatives.

(Thanks to Olivier Charbonneau for the wiki and to Heather Morrison for the alert that it was online and ready for use.)

source: New Information Commons wiki covers OA issues

The Office Chart That Really Counts

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

The Office Chart That Really Counts

Mapping informal relationships at a company is revealing — and useful

Two years ago, Ken Loughridge, an information technology manager living in Cheshire, England, uprooted his family and moved to the other side of the world. His company, engineering and environmental consulting firm MWH Global, was reorganizing its various information technology offices into a single global division, establishing its main service center on New Zealand’s more cost-effective shores and promoting Loughridge to manage the company’s worldwide network, system, and desktop needs. “By and large, the staff I’d adopted were strangers,” he says.
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To help adjust to his new surroundings, Loughridge took a map with him. A map of his organization, that is. A few months before, MWH had surveyed its IT employees, asking them which colleagues they consulted most frequently, who they turned to for expertise, and who either boosted or drained their energy levels. Their answers were analyzed in a software program and then plotted as a web of interconnecting nodes and lines representing people and relationships. Looking a little like an airline’s hub-and-spoke route maps, the web offered Loughridge a map — a corporate X-ray, in a sense — to how work really got done among his charges. It helped him visualize the invisible, informal connections between people that are missing on a traditional organizational chart.

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This post was written by David Teten (admin), source: The Office Chart That Really Counts

Mandating OA to data, and then accommodating it

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

Bela Tiwari, Dawn Field, and Jason Snape, Public repositories need serious funding, Nature, February 23, 2006. A letter to the editor. Excerpt:

We support the suggestion made by Carlos Santos and colleagues in Correspondence (Nature 438, 738; 2005) that data associated with peer-reviewed articles should be submitted to recognized, public repositories wherever possible.  We suggest that attaining this goal requires the support of national and international funding bodies that are willing both to implement data policies and to fund efforts to create community-driven standards and public repositories.  For funding bodies, supporting a data policy can be expensive. Current policy for the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) states that all data generated by projects funded under the environmental-genomics programme and the post-genomics and proteomics programme must be submitted to a suitable public repository, when one is available. NERC puts approximately 12% of the funds from each of these programmes towards data management and training through the establishment of the NERC Environmental Bioinformatics Centre, which facilitates ‘omic’ data management by developing data standards, software, databases, bioinformatics workstations and courses, and delivering these to the community, as well as hosting digital data for cases where suitable public repositories do not already exist.  We argue that putting the tools and facilities in place to enable good data management is an area worth investing in. As well as addressing the aims of integrated, long-term data storage and access, this investment would minimize duplication of effort, facilitate uptake and sharing of data and maximize the potential for comparative analyses.

source: Mandating OA to data, and then accommodating it

Pull: Networking and Success Since Benjamin Franklin

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

I recently had a chance to have a conversation with Pamela Walker Laird, a History professor with the University of Colorado at Denver, and author of the new book Pull: Networking and Success Since Benjamin Franklin, a history of networking and mentoring in American business, published by Harvard University Press, 2006.

She was kind enough to agree to participate in an email interview about her new book.

Teten: Why this book? What led to it? How did it evolve?

Laird: As a business historian, I repeatedly come across biographies of so-called self-made men whose careers had in fact depended on mentors and access to powerful networks. I began this project to determine for what portion of well-known businessmen this was true. Pretty quickly it became clear that the statistic was easy to calculate: 100%. That is, not one case of a successful businessman or woman exists for which mentors and/or networks were not essential.

Why is this? It is possible to get rich by gambling, either at a roulette table or by day trading, without participating in networks. But real business is a social process. Learning the trade, getting leads, making connections, closing deals, getting promotions: they all require social interactions. It is not enough to “know” your trade. Moreover, how can you learn a trade and perform it in isolation? Certainly you can’t make deals if you are unknown or you can’t be accepted as a person worth talking to. Your chances of closing a deal vastly improve if you can share a golf game, a beer, or even a taxi with decision makers.

What began as a study of 19th-century entrepreneurial businessmen, then grew into the 20th century. I began to think about the modern notions of corporations as meritocracies. Within these, thanks to personnel departments and “objective” standards for hiring and promotion, people are supposed to succeed based on their work performance only. People think of “office politics” as an aberration, something that happens when the system breaks down. However, once I started looking into the realities of what was supposed to be a meritocracy, I realized that connections and even connectability mattered in corporations, as much as they do in small firms and as they always had in the past, in every environment.

Even so, I do not want to minimize the importance of individual initiative and abilities. After all, connections help those who help themselves. Connections can create a opportunities for some, and they can deny opportunities to others, but they cannot make people into successes without their own effort and talent.

Teten: What are your goals for Pull? What sort of impact would you like it to have?

Laird: In talking about this project over the last few years, many of my audiences have found it gratifying to have their own experiences validated by my scholarship. This is especially the response I have received from women and disadvantaged minorities, as well as from anyone who has been passed up on the corporate ladder by people with fewer task-specific skills than they had.

In addition to these individual responses, I hope that Pull will provide insights to decision makers within corporations as well as those within less-privileged advocacy groups. Sometimes there is nothing like a good story—or in this case, three hundred years of stories—to show how something works.

I also hope to have an effect on how we think about people’s success and failure. Social capital is the term sociologists have developed for what I have been calling "connections and connectability". Anyone who reads Pull will ask, "What is the social capital story behind every success or failure?" That is, we will start to look for the advantages from having mentors and access to influential networks, or, conversely, the disadvantages of not having connections or not being connectable.

Teten:—What could a CEO who was trying to build a diverse management team gain from Pull?

Laird: • Most executives today understand how differences between groups of people can complicate and possibly undermine their firms’ interpersonal dynamics. So their commitments to employing and promoting diverse populations are practical as well as idealistic. Yet the best of intentions are usually not enough to see the bottlenecks and the pitfalls. Pull shows how managers struggled for decades with these problems and how some of them learned how to overcome them. More often than not, the strategies that worked applied universally what were understood by the 1960s as good, basic personnel management procedures. The trick was applying such recruiting, hiring, and promotion practices to everyone, and not just to those who seemed to have “potential.” Pull shows the problems that can result from presumptions about who has potential.

• However, no amount of “objectivity” in personnel practices can overcome the social factors in gatekeeping and networking. Therefore, rather than try to suppress the social factors, which simply drives them underground and generates all the tensions related to office politics, top managers can develop strategies for synthesizing social capital for everyone. Instead of ordering gatekeepers to exercise objective judgment, leaders can guide them to take their blinders off and to grow connections with people they might otherwise look past.

• This strategy is not the same as following all the latest cheery methods for “networking,” which tend to ignore persistent social processes and expectations. It means recognizing the power of social dynamics and distributing their advantages broadly. It may mean bringing social scientists on board to help everyone see ongoing stereotypes that persist despite the best of intentions. Predispositions and blind spots can hinder the operations of even the best laid plans for diversifying management and for creating teams out of the resulting mix.

• The trick to breaking through the glass ceiling and increasing diversity at the top of management is to recognize that people can’t break through from below, whatever their ambitions and talents. People can only pass through the glass ceiling by getting pulled from above. This almost always means that the people with whom top managers feel most comfortable are the ones they mentor and pull up. Therefore, mixing groups of people together is the key—creating ways for a sense of familiarity to develop between top managers and talented people with whom they would not ordinarily socialize.

Teten: What are some of Pull’s lessons for ambitious individuals?

Laird: — Because business is a social process, interactions are at its core. With whom do you interact? With whom do you have close, frequent interactions, and with whom do you have distant, occasional interactions? Optimally, you should interact with the people who make decisions about promotions or contracts as frequently as possible, both formally and informally. Sociologists have shown that we benefit by both “weak ties” and “strong ties.” Strong ties with people who don’t know anymore than we do, or who don’t have any more connections than we have, may not help us as much as multiple weak ties that are sources of lots of kinds of information and leads. Our “luck” can actually seem to improve as our contacts with other people grow. After all, sometimes luck is just a matter of hearing about a chance opportunity from a casual acquaintance.

The interactions that can benefit us don’t even need to be face-to-face, as you discuss in your recent book (The Virtual Handshake). Learning from online exchanges and making connections online are becoming increasingly useful tools. By adding up the benefits of many weak ties, online connections can provide a lot of information and advice. They can even lead to the close social interactions—the strong ties—that moving to the top of a corporate ladder or forming a partnership entail.

Sometimes even holding on to your job in this age of relentless downsizing requires deliberate care and feeding of your social capital. For example, if you telecommute, you must somehow make yourself “real” to the decision makers who put people’s names on the “keep” list. It is essential that you be something more than just a number or a name to them. Therefore, go to corporate headquarters on a regular basis. Find reasons to share “face time” with those list makers. Make sure that they think of you as a human being whom they like, as well as one who gets “the job done.” Keeping a job involves a lot more than “doing” it.

It is also possible to grow your social capital—if you can get past the first level of gatekeeping in your targeted profession. For instance, I know of a man who is now a screen writer. Initially he had no connections and couldn’t get any one to read his work, but he managed to get a job as a gofer in Hollywood. For a couple of years he ran errands and got coffee for screen writers and producers. Eventually, as writers got to know him, he could ask them to read something now and then. This long-term strategy for building social capital worked and got him “discovered.”

Networking does not just mean that you should pass out your business cards everywhere. Nor does making a pest of yourself help. A contact is not a connection. Nor is it always possible to be connectable. The people who are the gatekeepers or the decision makers in your field can be too insulated by their staffs, their schedules, the places where they socialize, or their prejudices to be accessible to you. If that is the case, then you have to figure out either how to break through that insulation, or rethink your ambitions. Sometimes the best strategy is that of the Hollywood gofer, who combined work and patience. He did his day-to-day job well and wrote his screen plays on his own time, preparing—not just waiting—for his opportunities.

Teten: What myths does Pull challenge and how?

Laird: — The most important myth that Pull overturns is that it is possible to be a self-made business success. For openers, Pull examines two of the most famous cases of allegedly self-made success, Benjamin Franklin and Andrew Carnegie, to demonstrate that even their successes involved astute and deliberate development and exploitation of networks. These two illustrious successes went against the statistical grain by truly achieving rags-to-riches success, for almost all American successes began in comfortable or very affluent circumstances. But they did not go against the social capital grain: like everyone else, their successes required access to networks and assistance from mentors and important gatekeepers.

The reason that social capital is necessary is that business is inherently, profoundly, a social process. It requires interactions, whether those be competitive or cooperative. Therefore, being a self-made success is impossible. That doesn’t mean that ambitious people can’t grow their social capital. It means that they must maximize the productive ways in which they interact with others who can assist them.

This also matters because we tend to praise people who become successful and think about them as having been self-made, as being rugged individualists. However, no one, not even Lee Iacocca or Jack Welch in our own times, has ever “made it” without help from mentors and networks.

Teten: Do the insights of Pull apply beyond business?

Laird: — The distributions of opportunity in all fields, in all professions, hinge on social dynamics. Having access to networks matters as much in medicine and academics as it does in business, possibly more. Likewise, in sports, coaches are the primary gatekeepers; in politics, lines of mentoring go back for generations; and in the courts, judges are almost always former clerks of older judges. Thus, up until the 1980s, most newspaper references to mentors were about people in sports, politics, and law, not business.

Teten: How does Pull relate to your own background, training, experiences?

Laird: — In the course of my life, I have had mentors in some situations, but lacked them in others. Being on both sides of this experience has given me insights about how these advantages work. In academia, mentors are at least as important as they are in business, and for all the same reasons: teaching the tools of the trade; giving advice; providing introductions to influential people; helping to form connections to gatekeepers. Watching all of this over the years and talking about it with a few trusted friends made me aware of the dynamics when I saw them happening in business.

One of Pull’s chapters begins with my experience working for a bank while I was in college. The vice president of my division asked me to stay, but when I jokingly said that I would stay if I could be a vice president in ten years, he was shocked! He said I could only become the secretary to a vice president. He was ready to be my mentor, but his ambitions for me would not have helped me climb his—or any other male-dominated—ladder. I had a contact, but it was not a connection.

Teten: Thank you very much for taking the time to speak with me!

This post was written by David Teten (admin), source: Pull: Networking and Success Since Benjamin Franklin

Paying physicians to write OA textbooks

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

Amedeo is challenging physicians to write an OA textbook on tuberculosis. From the Amedeo Challenge:

Free access to medical information is now standard for a variety of services (PubMed, Amedeo, Free Medical Journals). However, publication of top quality medical textbooks with free and anonymous access (i.e., Influenza Report 2006, HIV Medicine 2005) is still in its infancy. [The] Amedeo Challenge aims to change this situation by awarding prizes to physicians who write and publish free medical textbooks. A total of 12,500 Euro has currently been allocated for this purpose….The topics listed below [PS: only tubercuclosis today, but presumably more to come] have been included in the first round of the Amedeo Challenge Awards and we invite medical teams from all over the world to participate in one of the contests. The first three groups to publish a textbook on each of the topics will win 80 %, 16 %, and 4 % of the corresponding award, respectively. For more details, please check the application page.

For more of Amedeo’s position on OA medical textbooks, see its philosophy page:

HIV Medicine 2005, a medical textbook freely available over the Internet, will be downloaded more than 50,000 times in a year. At a cost of 52 € per copy, global savings (for those who otherwise would have bought the book) or added value (for those who would not have bought it) will exceed 2,500,000 €. The free Internet publication of Influenza Report 2006 will result in even more important savings and/or added value….Time is ripe. The medical community has begun to realize that it is surprisingly self-sufficient in distributing the information that it produces. A doctor who publishes his own textbooks can earn many times what he would be paid in royalties by a publishing house. In addition, a doctor who writes and publishes wants his texts to be read by as many colleagues, students and patients as possible. The best way to achieve this is through free parallel publication of these texts on the internet….Just imagine, if there were not only textbooks on HIV, influenza and SARS , but also on other subjects, such as hepatitis, immunology, rheumatology, cardiology, antibiotic therapy, tropical medicine. Or - why ever not? - even for every possible medical field (see the list at the end of How to become a sponsor). In an instant, we would have an extensive virtual library with all the relevant information needed for day-to-day use. 100 books, 50,000 pages, free of charge, updated yearly. 99% of the questions which crop up in our daily medical routine would be covered. Would this be a contribution to the improvement of medical care? - Yes, indeed it would.

source: Paying physicians to write OA textbooks

Arne Jakobson on OA and IRs

Saturday, February 25th, 2006
Tom Roper has blogged some notes on Arne Jakobson’s talk on OA at the recent HSLG meeting, Thinking the Unthinkable: Open Access (Kilkenney, February 23-24, 2006). Excerpt:
Bernard Barrett opened the 4th conference of IHLG, saying, in introducing the first session on open access that it was up to us to change things.
Mary Burke of UCD chaired the session and referred to the words of the Budapest declaration on open access on combining old traditions and new technology. She introduced Arne Jakobson, President of EAHIL. Arne spoke on open access and institutional repositories (IRs). EAHIL supports both, he said, but he was going to concentrate on IRs
He referred to the Budapest and Berlin statements, and to RCUK’s, though also to the controversial Royal Society statement. He gave some figures on numbers of IRs based on ePrints, OAIster and OpenDOAR.
He introduced the audience to the distinction between pre- and post-prints. He listed a number of benefits of IRs: [1] increased visibility of an institution’s research, [2] no delay, [3] better availability, [4] secure and sustainable storage. Libraries are the natural hosts for IRs; storage and software costs are low. The challenges are cultural.
Arne then illustrated his point by describing the development of the Oslo repository, DUO. They will require all postgraduate theses to be submitted electronically from 2007. For electronic journal articles they have a sister project, FRIDA, and deposit is mandatory for scientific staff. Nationally they have NORA, the Norwegian Open Research Archive.
He concluded that a strategic plan was important, and that it was difficult to change scientists’ and postgraduate’s behaviour. Questions: who adds metadata? Arne said that researchers do so on submission, using a simplified set of subject headings. What abut peer review? Items in FRIDA are peer-reviewed by definition, because they all post-prints.
What’s the biggest block to compliance? Researchers’ time is short and workload heavy. Arne is considering offering financial incentives for submission. Funding bodies are not yet insisting on deposit in IRs.
Citation counts? The database will contain citation to journals. It’s clear open access increases visibility.

source: Arne Jakobson on OA and IRs

Does Perfect 10 cut for or against the Google Library project?

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

You’ve probably heard the news that Perfect 10 won its copyright lawsuit against Google. A U.S. District Court ruled on February 17 that Google’s display of thumbnail images from the Perfect 10 web site is not fair use. I won’t be blogging this story in depth, but I may blog occasional pieces arguing that the case has implications for the Google Library project. Here are two, pulling in opposite directions.

In the New York Times this morning, Edward Wyatt quotes representatives of the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers (AAP), who believe the Perfect 10 decision helps their separate lawsuits against the Google Library project. Excerpt:

“I think it takes the wind out of their sails,” Jan Constantine, the general counsel for the Authors Guild, said of the Perfect 10 decision. The guild and the Association of American Publishers brought copyright infringement lawsuits against Google over its Book Search program.

Michael Kwun, litigation counsel for Google, disagreed, saying that the case “will affect only searches related to Perfect 10, and will not have any effect on other Google products.”…Allan R. Adler, a vice president for governmental and legal affairs at the Association of American Publishers, said the California court’s willingness to rule against the Arriba Soft precedent under a different set of facts was encouraging to the publishers’ group, as was the judge’s statement that the public benefit of Google’s search engine does not necessarily outweigh the rights of copyright holders.

“Google is going to have a difficult time arguing that there isn’t a marketplace for publishers to license their works” given the Perfect 10 decision, Mr. Adler said.

Neither the Perfect 10 case nor the Arriba Soft case are direct precedents for the Book Search lawsuits, which were filed in Federal District Court in New York. But Mr. Adler said that even if the publishers do not assert that there is currently a market for the few lines of text displayed by Google Book Search, the fact that a market exists for the digital copies created by Google could work in the publishers’ favor.

Ms. Frank agreed. She noted that the judge in the Perfect 10 case further differentiated that case from Arriba Soft by noting that Google’s AdSense program allows it to generate revenue from its search technology.

By contrast, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) emphasizes the narrowness of the judge’s ruling and the principles within it that support search indexing and even the permissionless display of low-res thumbnail images. Excerpt:

[The ruling] will be remembered as a little bad for Google, but a lot good for the Web….First, the court firmly rejected the notion that in-line linking of images directly infringes a copyright owner’s public display right. That’s a huge victory for the World Wide Web, which has long relied on in-line linking. Had Perfect 10 won on this point, every in-line link could potentially trigger automatic liability unless you got prior permission for the link….Second, the court rejected Perfect 10’s secondary liability arguments. Basically, Perfect 10 argued that because Google “created the audience” for infringing websites, it should be held responsible for the infringements on those sites. Imagine that — because you help someone find a site, you’re held responsible for what happens on that site? That would have been a catastrophe not only for search engines, but for linking generally….Third, the court reasoned that merely visiting a website that includes infringing material does not make you an infringer. When you visit a website, your browser makes a copy of images in its cache. According to Perfect 10, that means every person who views a webpage that includes an infringing image becomes an infringer….The court rejected that argument, pointing out that most people don’t treat their browser cache as a repository for infringing goodies, and concluding that copies made automatically by your browser are probably fair uses. So that’s three major victories for the Web at large. Now what about the bad fair use ruling? While I don’t agree with the court’s analysis, let’s start by examining how narrow it really is. First, the court is not condemning all thumbnails created by image search engines. In fact, the court can’t do that because the Ninth Circuit (whose precedents bind the district court here) has already approved that practice as a fair use in the Kelly v. Arriba Soft decision. So the court’s ruling only tells us that there is a line out beyond Kelly v. Arriba Soft that search engines may not cross. Second, the court did not announce any new fair use legal principles….So the fair use ruling really boils down to one fact-bound question: what distinguishes Google’s thumbnails from Ditto’s (the search engine in Kelly v. Arriba Soft)? Two things, according to the court: (1) Google’s ability to share ad revenues from the infringing sites, thanks to AdSense, and (2) Perfect 10’s deal with Fonestarz to provide low-rez images for cellphones.

source: Does Perfect 10 cut for or against the Google Library project?

What OUP has learned from Oxford Open

Friday, February 24th, 2006
David Worlock, OUP: OA In The World Of Intelligent Experiment, EPS Insights, February 24, 2006 (accessible only to subscribers). Excerpt:
Oxford University Press’s Open Access programme is a model of pragmatic experimentation, and repositions the publisher as the intermediary of choice who picks the publishing and revenue models most appreciated by the widely differentiated sub-sector markets of STM - and social sciences and humanities….The difference between fundamental research and work on research technique can be demonstrated by a willingness in the former to pay the access bill, and in the latter to go for conventional publishing. These are the type of symptomatic lessons that Oxford are learning through a steady process of experimentation since 2003….In some areas of molecular biology some 30-40% of submissions in some journals are author-paid, and Oxford has accepted around 1,000 articles on these terms. It is probable that only BioMed Central have accepted more. Oxford’s tariff is a moderate one: UKP800 (USD150) for authors based in a subscribing institution, UKP1,500 (USD2,800) where the author is based in a non-subscribing institution. As ‘free’ articles mount in the journal’s portfolio, so subscription levels fall. OUP have successful journals where OA author-paid articles are 30% of content, and subscription pricing has declined pro rata…. It seems likely that the first result will be a demonstration of the complexity of the market - some OUP journals will be 100% OA one day - others will never get underway. Oxford Open will prove the poverty of generalisation.

source: What OUP has learned from Oxford Open

Sharing and preserving data

Friday, February 24th, 2006

Linda O’Brien, E-Research: Strengthening institutional partneships, University of Melbourne UniNews, February 20, 2006. Excerpt:

Whether it’s e-research in Australia, cyberinfrastructure in the USA, the grid in Europe, or e-science in the UK, a transformation is occurring in research practice, a transformation that will have a profound impact on the roles of researchers and information professionals working in higher education….Arguably technology is the easy part; harder is the human dimension. The matter of connecting people (researchers) to resources is not only an international issue but also a national, regional, and local issue. Linking people to resources – researchers to scholarly materials – has been the role of the librarian for centuries. Libraries have traditionally been central to the research endeavour, managing and preserving resources increasingly in digital form and making these resources accessible to the researcher, often through collaboration and partnerships with other libraries. Hence, libraries have know-how not only in managing, making accessible and preserving scholarly resources but also in forming federations and collaborations to share published scholarly work. But the nature of scholarly commu­nication is changing, with researchers ­wanting access to primary research data, often in digital form. No longer is scholarly communication a final discrete publication that is to be managed, made accessible, and preserved. Libraries may even risk fading from existence if they don’t respond effectively to the changing environment. In e-research, it is the primary research data that must often be managed, made accessible, and curated….But who will take responsibility for the longer-term curation of and access to this data?

PS: This article first appeared in Educause Review for November/December 2005.

source: Sharing and preserving data

Free even for commercial reuse: not a crime

Friday, February 24th, 2006
Gervase Markham, Free software? You can’t just give it away, London Times, February 21, 2006. (Thanks to Seth Johnson.) If you’ve been defending open-access literature for long, you’ve encountered your share of incredulity at the very idea. Enjoy Markham’s encounter with incredulity at the very idea of open-source software. Excerpt:
Who could possibly be upset with the Mozilla Foundation for giving away its Firefox browser? One of my roles at the Mozilla Foundation relates to copyright licensing. I’m responsible for making sure that the software we distribute respects the conditions of the free software licences of the underlying code. I’m also the first point of contact for licensing questions….A little while ago, I received an e-mail from a lady in the Trading Standards department of a large northern town [in the UK]. They had encountered businesses which were selling copies of Firefox, and wanted to confirm that this was in violation of our licence agreements before taking action against them. I wrote back, politely explaining the principles of copyleft – that the software was free, both as in speech and as in price, and that people copying and redistributing it was a feature, not a bug. I said that selling verbatim copies of Firefox on physical media was absolutely fine with us, and we would like her to return any confiscated CDs and allow us to continue with our plan for world domination (or words to that effect). Unfortunately, this was not well received. Her reply was incredulous: “I can’t believe that your company would allow people to make money from something that you allow people to have free access to. Is this really the case?” she asked. “If Mozilla permit the sale of copied versions of its software, it makes it virtually impossible for us, from a practical point of view, to enforce UK anti-piracy legislation, as it is difficult for us to give general advice to businesses over what is/is not permitted.” I felt somewhat unnerved at being held responsible for the disintegration of the UK anti-piracy system. Who would have thought giving away software could cause such difficulties?…In a world where both types of software exist, greater discernment is required on the part of the enforcers. I hope this is the beginning of the end of any automatic assumption that sharing software with your neighbour must be a crime.

source: Free even for commercial reuse: not a crime

OA as a campaign issue in a student government election

Friday, February 24th, 2006

Gavin Baker is running for the Student Senate at the University of Florida. Baker co-founded the Florida chapter of Free Culture and is making open access a campaign issue. His platform is offline at the moment (but the problem is probably temporary, so keep trying). He tells me in an email:

I’ll advocate for open access to university research and journals, work to expand library digitization projects, promote open source software and open file formats….As far as I know, I am the first student to make open access an electoral issue.

He’s the first as far as I know too. His candidacy and position could make a difference: At UF, the Student Senate controls an $11 million budget, the third largest in the US. Go, Gavin!

Note to students elsewhere: learn about open access and what you and your university can do to promote it. Take your commitment into your research and future career. But in the meantime, take it into your student government!

source: OA as a campaign issue in a student government election

Repository deposit scenarios

Friday, February 24th, 2006
Rachel Heery has collected a seeries of deposit scenarios for OA repositories and posted them on the JISC Digital Repository wiki. She welcomes additional scenarios.

source: Repository deposit scenarios

An OA palentology journal gets an impact factor, helping the whole field

Friday, February 24th, 2006

William R. Riedel, R. David Polly, and Whitey Hagadorn, Coming of Age: ISI & Googling, Palaeontologia Electronica, February 2006. (Thanks to Bruno Granier.) Excerpt:

Palaeontologia Electronica has taken two major steps this past year: contributors have been actively probing the potential of the World Wide Web to further paleontology, and ISI began indexing the journal in its Science Citation Index and Web of Science.

In our editorial pages, Warren Allmon (2004) recently reported that he located research information with Google that he could not have found by any other means: he learned about seven fossil localities yielding turritelline-dominated assemblages that had not been reported in standard research literature. The clues came from pictures on museum websites, from fossils-for-sale sites, from the site of a public park in Germany, and from geological field trip guides….In a subsequent editorial, Johnson, Filkorn and Stecheson (2005) described how to harness the power of search engines to make institutional information, such as collections catalog data, accessible through the same searches. By engineering web-based links, they made the catalog of paleontological collections in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County accessible to search-engines….These are insightful developments, harnessing the expertise of specialist users and adding to the value of the output of inevitably limited curatorial staff.

Since its inception, Palaeontologia Electronica has tried to position itself within the world of Internet searching. PE is an academic research journal, but one whose pages are all freely accessible to academics, the public, and search engines. If we repeat Allmon’s experiment today, Googling Turritella brings up Allmon’s own editorial as the fourth hit. Putting quality research information into the public domain is increasingly important as politically motivated attacks on science, especially evolution and historical geology, mount (the University of California Museum of Paleontology and the US National Science Foundation were recently named in a lawsuit aimed at their evolution website, for example). Misinformation on these subjects dominates the Internet, a situation that could easily lead astray those people who try to use the web to come to their own informed opinions….

[Y]oung researchers are increasingly conscious of impact factors when choosing where to submit their papers. This is bad news for the field of paleontology. In order to have an impact factor, much less a high one, a journal must first be indexed by ISI. In 2004, only thirty-two paleontology journals, in the broadest sense, were indexed by ISI….In 1992, vertebrate paleontology papers were published in 244 journals, of which only 37, or 15% are now indexed by ISI….85% of paleontology journals are not indexed and do not have impact factors, forcing them into second-tier status as venues for publishing new work. Irregularly appearing publications, such as monograph series, also have no official impact factor, although monographs would frequently count as citation classics had they been indexed. The many publication series that do not have ISI impact factors are having increasing difficulty getting quality submissions, while the manuscript backlog in journals with impact factors has been growing phenomenally. This situation has at least three negative effects on the field: it is more difficult to get work published in “quality” journals (i.e., those with impact factors), thus decreasing the apparent productivity of individual paleontologists; it causes non-indexed journals to fail because of lack of submissions or subscriptions, thus further reducing the number of possible venues for publishing paleontology and potentially concentrating those that remain in the hands of commercial publishers rather than professional academic societies; and it decreases the total volume of paleontology papers published and the length of time between submission and publication, which has a negative effect on the impact factors of those paleontology journals that are indexed….[T]he vast majority of citations to paleontological work are not considered by ISI in their calculation of impact factors for paleo journals. All things being equal, we can expect from these statistics that paleo impact factors would increase dramatically if all of our journals were considered.

source: An OA palentology journal gets an impact factor, helping the whole field

February issue of ScieCom.Info

Friday, February 24th, 2006

The February issue of ScieCom.Info is now online. Here are the OA-related articles.

  • Peter Linde, Bottom(s) up to a Top down approach. Abstract: “It is comparatively easy to build and structure an institutional repository. The difficulty lies in filling it with content. This very trivial observation is not uncommon among repository administrators and I certainly agree. At Blekinge Institute of Technology (BTH) we have followed a Bottom up approach, which now, almost ten years later, hopefully will lead to a Top down policy. The two strategies complement each other and maybe a two-front approach can be part of an answer on how to get submissions going.”

  • Eva Müller, Open Access, the next steps at Uppsala University. Abstract: “The insistence of the scientific community and the general public that publicly financed research should be widely and quickly accessible without barriers is known as the Open Access movement. This is supported by new technologies and new economic models which are helping to create a greater diversity of complementary possibilities for the dissemination of scholarly work.”

  • Staffan Parnell and Ultuna Aina Svensson, Stick or carrot - how to fill an institutional repository. Abstract: “SLU (Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet – Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) has four main campuses, situated in different parts of Sweden. SLU employs 3200 people and has ca. 3300 undergraduates and 800 postgraduate students. Roughly half the staff are concerned with teaching and research. The main subject areas are agriculture, forestry, veterinary medicine and environmental protection. About 150 doctoral and licentiate theses are produced annually in the postgraduate programmes and about 7-800 undergraduate theses in the undergraduate programmes.”

source: February issue of ScieCom.Info

Implementation Science — new OA journal launched

Friday, February 24th, 2006

Implementation Science
is an independent, Open Access journal hosted by BioMed Central. From the inaugural editorial:
Implementation research is the scientific study of methods to promote the systematic uptake of research findings and other evidence-based practices into routine practice, and, hence, to improve the quality and effectiveness of health services and care. This relatively new field includes the study of influences on healthcare professional and organisational behaviour.



Implementation Science

- Fulltext v1+ (2006+); ISSN: 1748-5908.

source: Implementation Science — new OA journal launched

Michael Ashburner wins 2006 Benjamin Franklin Award

Friday, February 24th, 2006

Bioinformatics.org has announced that Michael Ashburner has won the Benjamin Franklin Award for 2006. Excerpt:

Bioinformatics.Org is proud to present the 2006 Benjamin Franklin Award in the Life Sciences to Michael Ashburner of Cambridge University. As expressed by his nominators, Prof. Ashburner has made fundamental contributions to many open access bioinformatics projects including FlyBase, the GASP project, the Gene Ontology project, and the Open Biological Ontologies project, and he was instrumental in the establishment of the European Bioinformatics Institute. He is also known for advocating open access to biological information.

The Benjamin Franklin Award in the Life Sciences is a humanitarian award presented annually by Bioinformatics.Org to an individual who has, in his or her practice, promoted free and open access to the materials and methods used in the life sciences. The Award is named for Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), one of the most remarkable men of his time. Scientist, inventor, statesman, Franklin freely and openly shared his ideas and refused to patent his inventions, and it is the opinion of the founders of Bioinformatics.Org that he embodied the best traits of a scientist….The ceremony for the presentation of the Award will be held at the 2006 Bioinformatics.Org Annual Meeting (BiOAM), held in conjunction with the Life Sciences Conference and Expo, Boston, Massachusetts, April 3 to 5, 2006. The presentation will be made April 5 at 10:00 AM, and it is open to all attendees. It involves a short introduction, the presentation of the certificate, and the laureate seminar….Past laureates of the Benjamin Franklin Award in the Life Sciences include Ewan Birney (2005), Lincoln Stein (2004), James Kent (2003) and Michael Eisen (2002).

source: Michael Ashburner wins 2006 Benjamin Franklin Award