It's been said that the shift to OA will do little or
nothing to help alleviate the economic pressures on universities, and
that most of the money for publishing will continue "to be sucked out of
universities for the benefit of other businesses".
It is a widespread and common misconception, in Academia as well as
in publishing circles, that what is being paid for is ‘publishing’. I
don’t think it is. Publishing (as in ‘making public’) is actually
exceedingly cheap. It can be done on the web by anyone at insignificant
cost. Researchers don't need publishers to convey knowledge to other researchers.
No, what is being paid for is what might be called ‘status enhancement’.
The status of individual researchers, of research departments, of
universities, even of whole countries. Publishing is used – hijacked? –
for that purpose. In order to work as a status enhancement mechanism,
publishing has to be formal, with ‘quality’ proxies such as peer-review
and citation metrics and Impact Factors, with ‘labels’ (journal titles)
that indicate these ‘quality’ markers, with redundancy limitation rules
(every article must be unique, ‘self-plagiarism’ is not even allowed),
etc. The providers of these services – the ‘hijackers’? – call
themselves publishers (whether OA or non-OA), of course, but they are in
the employ of those in the ego-system who desire status enhancement.
And they charge what they can get away with. That’s known as 'market mechanism'.
They are just catering to what is expected of them. Academia drops the
money on the proverbial street and publishers just pick it up. They are
not in the business of alleviating the economic pressures on
universities and most never pretended that they ever were (although it must be said that OA
publishing, at least in principle, introduces competition on price into the
system which may indeed help with alleviating some economic pressures;
although it is a solution that comes with its own problems, as many a
solution does).
Those who have ethical or moral questions – or even just economical
questions – about the cost of formal publishing and the profits made,
should consider asking those questions as well in relation to the
necessity of the desire for status enhancement in Academia. Is the
importance of such status enhancement worth the cost?
Jan Velterop
(This post has also appeared as a comment on a post on The Scholarly Kitchen blog)
They also do a reasonably good job at archiving and organizing research, so that it is easy to find 40 years later when someone realizes that an obscure experiment was actually important.
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