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News from JURN

Category Archives: Open Access publishing

Picture this

12 Thursday Oct 2017

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

A possible unwanted side-effect of making PhD theses open access in public repositories, if not actually Creative Commons… image libraries want hefty image reproduction fees…

“consider that your average art history PhD will have dozens, if not perhaps hundreds, of images, then soon even an unpublished PhD can become prohibitively expensive. You want to discuss mid-18th Century portraiture, and show perhaps 50 images? That’ll be £750. You want to turn that PhD into a book? £3,050 please, before you’ve even thought of printing costs. Want to put on a Hogarth exhibition, with a decent catalogue? £8,600. Ouch. And Tate [in the UK] are on the cheaper end of the scale.”

And that’s before many image libraries realise that the PhD might be made public as a PDF, and thus that their digital pictures could be extracted at print-res (pro version of Adobe Acrobat, go: Tools | Document Processing | Export All Images) and then whisked into the public domain by cackling anarchists.

But the image given in the article as an example seems to have already had something similar happen to it. It’s the Tate’s copy of “The Painter and his Pug” (£162, please… the Tate having already taken PhD PDFs in repositories into account, and gouged accordingly). The picture’s now on Wikimedia and gleefully marked as public domain.

Still, that picture is by Hogarth. If you’re writing on someone more obscure or more modern, or don’t have the time or search skills to go burrowing into Hathi and Archive.org, then I can see how the gouging ‘repository-increased’ fees could make it difficult.

And difficult not only for the hapless writer. But also for librarians. Once the PhD is in a repository and is the institution’s responsibility, one suspects that some especially viscous picture libraries may even decide to make a bundle of cash by finding ‘personal use’ images in PhDs and demanding institutional prices for their use. In which case in future might we see PhD PDFs with most of the pictures blanked out, due to a mis-match between the assumed ‘personal use, on the library-shelf only’ licence for the pictures (for instance, Google’s 10m-picture LIFE magazine archive) and the subsequent public and institutional status of the document once it hits the repository? (And does so with or without the permission of the author, increasingly). If so, who is then going to go through and censor? One suspects it’ll be too much trouble for librarians to do that by hand, and too much trouble to figure out what stays and what goes (I assume 100% reliable machine-readable rights tagging is a non-starter, due to the human author in the loop). In which case the university’s risk-averse lawyers would just recommend that some bot should automatically detect and delete all the pictures, or — as with the Digital Library of India books that I’ve seen recently — their contrast would be increased so far that the pictures become almost illegible.

One way an author might get around that is to also provide a search link with keywords and phrases embedded in the URL. Thus my URL, when clicked, searches multiple image search-engines for “The Painter and his Pug” etc with a size of more than 2MB. Of course, readers can do that for themselves, but it would be a nice future-proofing courtesy. Or what about ‘intelligent PDFs’ that do that for you, fetching and embedding the required image on-the-fly from wherever it can be best found? An AI might help with that, and perhaps the link might contain an AI-friendly formula for what the required image should look like (big red splotch here, eyes there, etc) to ensure that the correct one is fetched.

Reference Rot in Scholarly Communication

03 Friday Feb 2017

Posted by futurilla in Ooops!, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

New on YouTube, a 35 minute talk on Reference Rot in Scholarly Communication, arising from the December 2016 PLOS paper. The video’s skippable intro bit ends at 6.50 mins.

“We can confidently say that three out of four URI references have drifted over time.”

34

Knowledge Unlatched – 2017 round

28 Saturday Jan 2017

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Publishers have until 10th February 2017 to submit suggested humanities book titles to Knowledge Unlatched. Selected books are made Open Access in perpetuity, albeit usually minus the cover art/design as part of the Creative Commons PDF. Losses are defrayed by a consortium of libraries.

469302_cover

106 Knowledge Unlatched titles currently show up in OAPEN and thus in JURN. Although 343 titles were unlatched for 2016, which means that a lot more are coming soon.

Beall’s List 2017

04 Wednesday Jan 2017

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Beall’s List of Predatory Publishers 2017, just released.

Lulu.com launches academic service suite – Glasstree

01 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by futurilla in Economics of Open Access, Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

The leaders in affordable print-on-demand, Lulu.com, have just launched a book publishing service for academics. Glasstree offers the…

“tools and services needed by academic authors, and will leverage technology, such as print-on-demand, to distribute their works more cost-effectively. [aims to boost the] commercial academic publishing market, such as accelerating time to market, more transparent pricing, and reversing the revenue model to allow academics and scholars to realize 70% of the profit from sales of their work. Among Glasstree’s advertised services: support for open access, including the deposit of works in institutional repositories; Tools for bibliometric tracking, so academic authors can monitor Impact Factors, and other relevant measurements; More control over licensing options, through a partnership with Creative Commons; and access to traditional peer review.”

Note that…

“Glasstree is currently in a limited free trial period until 31st December 2016. During this time, authors can publish as many titles as desired, free of charge, receiving a range of complimentary services.”

Somehow I doubt that includes the related Glassleaf services where book production… “Packages start at as low as $2,625”. Ouch.

The Glasstree signup doesn’t port over your existing Lulu details, and thus presumably can’t port your academic book files over from Lulu either. Looks like it’s a wholly separate system.

glass

Institutional Repositories and ‘dark deposit’

03 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

OA expert Richard Poynder has a new PDF paper on his blog “Open Access, Almost-OA, OA Policies, and Institutional Repositories”. In it he looks at how many fulltext papers are in various repositories, and explores the trend toward the dark side that involves records that state of the PDF that ‘this item is embargoed until…’ .

Poynder’s article also has details and very extensive analysis of the “Button”, sometimes seen on repository record pages, which allows one to request a fulltext copy of an embargoed repository item.

As an aside, he notes…

a suspicion I have long had that repository managers are depositing a lot of historical data.”

Yup, I can confirm that feeling. Not all, of course, but a few do have a lot of historical material jumbled in. I guess that may be because they only have funds and staff to run one repository, which then has to hold everything. Only a few large universities sensibly split their repositories into separate servers/URLs, thus:

* a slimline one for public access to theses and masters dissertations.

* one to capture the flow of all the public-access scholarly OA items, sometimes even with filters that can knock out preprints, conference papers, or which can focus only on papers from individual journal titles.

* plus a more conventionally rambling repository to hold the digitisation of pre-1960s content, image collections, university ephemera, and the ‘local interest’ collections such as newspapers and trade magazines. Sometimes this has a slick public-friendly ‘showcase’ front-end, sometimes it’s just a list browse.

* big U.S. law schools increasingly have their own separate repositories, and their own OJS server for their journals.

* and running alongside all those, an OJS installation to run the university’s current journals (some universities even split their mainstream academic journals from the graduate school / undergraduate / creative writing / alumni magazine titles, having the latter on a second OJS installation).

It’s my feeling that even smaller universities may soon have to adopt such splitting strategies, given the tidal wave of OA content that’s looming on the horizon.

When servers do get split up like this there’s often no public interlinking between them, even in terms of using the front page of each as a platform to publicise the existence of the others.

Flip the classroom: a survey of some magazines on Issuu

27 Friday Nov 2015

Posted by futurilla in My general observations, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

This is my one-off selective survey of some journals and substantial magazines available via Issuu.com as free flipbooks, at November 2015:

Archive : the journal of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art

archi

AR[t] : augmented reality, art and technology

artlab

B/AS : journal of dress practice

bias

Berkley Review of Latin American Studies

berk

Bonefolder : an ejournal for the book binder and book artist (‘best of’ compendium as an ebook)

bone

British Journal of Photography (substantial but partial previews)

britj

Catalan Historical Review and many other Catalan journals from www.iec.cat

catr

Cornell Journal of Architecture and Cornell AAP

corne

Eye Magazine and other IAFOR titles

eyem

Explorations : The Texas A&M Undergraduate Journal

explo

Fire Ecology

firee

Graduate Journal of Food Studies

foods

Horizonte : journal of architectural discourse

horiz

Humanities (National Endowment for the Humanities magazine)

human

Illumination : the Undergraduate Journal of Humanities

illumin

International Journal of Wilderness

wilder

Jewish Museum Berlin journal

jmb

Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Sexuality

js

Kinfolks Quarterly : a journal of black expression

kinfolks

Medical Humanities Journal of Boston College

medhum

On Site

onsite

Perspective (the highest end of the movie industry, journal of the Art Directors’ Guild) (also has an easier PDF index)

perspect

Planum : the Journal of Urbanism

planum

UCSC Jewish Studies Newsletter

js-s

WWB and related fashion industry magazines.

wwb

The Academia.edu advantage

23 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Post your articles to Academia.edu as soon as they’re published, get more citations….

Based on a sample size of 34,940 papers, we find that a paper in a median impact factor journal uploaded to Academia.edu receives 41% more citations after one year than a similar article not available online, 50% more citations after three years, and 73% after five years. We also found that articles also posted to Academia.edu had 64% more citations than articles only posted to other online venues, such as personal and departmental homepages, after five years.” [the conclusion expands this “other” element, it includes: “journal site, or any other online hosting venue”]

The studied papers were uploaded at “the same time they’re published”. Excluded from the study were… “articles uploaded to Academia.edu after they were published”.

Amazingly, the authors also note that…

To our knowledge there has been no research on what features of open access repositories or databases make articles easier to discover”

All that public money spent on repositories around the world, and not one librarian has felt the need to test for such public discoverability vectors? Seriously?

oaFindr

22 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ 1 Comment

A new Canadian commercial start-up is offering its new oaFindr service, with free / low-cost trials for university libraries. oaFindr is said to be able to explore a library’s existing journal subscriptions, and to identify just the open access articles within the hybrid journals. According to the press release oaFindr…

… enable[s] academic institutions to analyze their journal subscriptions and provide[s] them with a reliable, precise search and discovery tool to retrieve all open access articles. This solution will also help them comply with governmental open access mandates, and support them in rapidly increasing the diffusion of their institutions’ scholarly production in a manner that is much less labour-intensive”

The idea appears to be that the discovered OA articles are then harvested and passed to the company’s related oaFoldr service, with oaFoldr providing a conduit into their hosted repository for the OA articles. Nice if it works and gets adopted and, if public, it would provide a welcome new mega-repository for Google and JURN to index. Alternatively, I suppose that the oaFoldr may just be a private folder for cataloguers, in which the articles reside before being placed into the university’s own repository. More likely to be the latter, since otherwise one commercial company could potentially get to corral the world’s OA article output in its own repository, and would then be in a position to sell it back to universities via an enhanced search and mining/metrics service.

Regrettably, as Bernard Rentier observes, mass extraction and archiving of 1000s of OA articles per month from commercial databases may not be welcomed by the big publishers…

Elsevier has designed a way to prevent researchers from mass-downloading articles from its website where they are so-called open access…”

So how would universities harvest efficiently? Bear in mind that commercial licenses may also prevent a university from taking the proprietary hybrid journal metadata from the likes of Elsevier, Springer, Oxford etc, along with their OA fulltext PDFs. So I guess it’s much more likely that each institution will play safe and harvest only PDF articles by their own researchers, thus giving a much lower harvesting volume that might not trigger download blocking. And that they’ll find ways not to take any metadata generated around the OA article by publisher databases.

I wonder if some large institutions may have to harvest articles via spoofing multiple ‘student’ accounts? Or is oaFindr itself pre-harvesting OA PDFs from hybrid journals and then vending them to institutions along with metadata? Probably not, or the big publishers would likely be throwing lawsuits at the company. oaFindr seems more likely to be a sort of super-Paperity, but covering all hybrid titles from the big publishers plus all the DOAJ titles at the article level. I’m guessing a lot here, or course, but if such a service works then it would be rather cool. Though probably lacking in things like Google-strength semantics and relevance ranking.

So let’s assume that the university libraries are the ones that do the work of harvesting OA PDFs for their repositories. OA mandates and the consequent exponential growth of OA articles may still lead to the hitting of a ‘mass downloading’ roadblock in the near future, even at a university which restricts itself to its own outputs and/or harvests fulltext via multiple accounts. Big publishers might even change their database small-print, so as to forbid ‘type targetted’ mass harvesting leading to local storage of articles.

I guess one solution would then be to rely only on having repository records + Web links to the fulltext (fulltext hosted back on the journal’s website). Though that assumes that links don’t break. Which they do, and at a horrendous rate.

In the end I suspect it may just be easier for a university to go after its research staff with pitch-forks, and literally force them to upload their OA papers to the university repository. If your new paper isn’t in the repository after 28 days, then your next month’s salary gets docked 20% and your department can’t apply for any new funding or external partnerships in the next six months. That sort of thing.


Update, Nov 2017: OAFindr is now called 1Findr.

JISC benchmarking tool for OA in the UK

07 Monday Sep 2015

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

A handy benchmarking tool for OA in the UK…

CIAO is a benchmarking tool for assessing institutional readiness for Open Access (OA) compliance … produced as part of the JISC OA Pathfinder…”

oaguide

Looks good, but omits the utterly vital element of ‘Public, Peer and Government Discovery’. I’d suggest adding an extra strip with the following wording/steps…

ENVISIONING: We do not know what proportion of our OA repository contents can be found via public search-engines, or the quality of the search results that link to our repository.

DISCOVERING: We are considering the most effective steps to improve our repository coverage in public search-engines, and are taking advantage of guides and free consultancy work offered by staff at major search engines such as Google. We will rank the priority of these steps by both their likely impact on discoverability and ease of implementation.

DESIGNING & PILOTING: We have committed funds to implement and test at least ten commonly recommended methods that will increase our repository’s coverage in the public search-engines. Graduate interns have been recruited to aid the repository staff during this period.

ROLLING OUT: The planned measures have been turned on or implemented. Systems and staff are in place, and best practice workflows have been clearly documented and disseminated. Search engine indexing of our repository content is being tested to gather reliable metrics on: increased indexing coverage; time to index new content; and search result quality. We are also internally monitoring visitor traffic and open/dwell rates.

EMBEDDING: We are examining further measures to boost the quality of the public search results for our repository content, such as ensuring that the document title is used in the results Web link. We are considering acquiring funds to undertake certain large-scale measures once deemed too expensive to implement, such as retrospectively re-working the university-branded cover-pages applied to our PDFs. Senior staff have recognized that Web traffic to our OA repository represents a valuable branding, outreach and recruitment opportunity. The repository is no longer seen as drain on resources or as general-use web storage for the university.

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