Re: Value-Neutral Names Needed for the Two Forms of OA
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At the risk of disturbing symmetries that always look pleasant to th
eeye and the mind, I would suggest taking the first two suggestions
fronm the "transparent" category and work them together as follows:
Read OA vs Re-use OA
Otherwise, like Stevan, I have the feeling that the distinction
between "basic" and "full" will win the day, precisely because it is
a little fuzzy. However, it clearly marks the presence of an
important distinction.
There is an interesting case stuck cleverly somewhere in the middle
of all of this: it is the case of documents digitized by Google. They
can be easily accesed and read. If you accept Google's tools, they
are searchable. However, if you download them, you end up with inert,
paper-like digital material because you are stuck with page images.
You can OCR them anew, of course, but ... In short, as Clifford Lynch
has pointed out, the computational potential of these documents is
locked up unless you are ready to redo Google's indexing work.
Is this basic OA? Is it more as it appears to be? I would be
interested in knowing what others think about this.
Best,
Jean-Claude
Le vendredi 02 mai 2008 à 23:07 -0400, Stevan Harnad a écrit :
The Two Forms of OA Have Been Defined: They Now Need
Value-Neutral Names
SUMMARY: Our joint statement with Peter Suber
noted that both price-barrier-free access and
permission-barrier-free access are indeed
forms of Open Access (OA) and that virtually
all Green OA and much of Gold OA today is
just price-barrier-free OA, although we both
agree that permission-barrier-free OA is the
ultimate desideratum. What we had not
anticipated was that if price-barrier-free OA
were actually named by its logical condition
as "Weak OA" (i.e., the necessary condition
for permission-barrier-free OA) then that
would create difficulties for those who are
working hard toward the universal adoption of
the mandates to provide price-barrier-free OA
(Green OA self-archiving mandates) that are
only now beginning to grow and flourish. So
we are looking for a shorthand or stand-in
for "price-barrier-free OA" and
"permission-barrier-free OA" that will convey
the distinction without any pejorative
connotations for either form of OA. The two
forms of OA stand defined, explicitly and
logically. They are now in need of
value-neutral names (e.g., BASIC vs. FULL
OA).
"Weak/Strong" marks the logical distinction between two
forms of OA: price-barrier-free access is anecessary
condition for permission-barrier-free access, and
permission-barrier-free access is a sufficient
condition for price-barrier-free access. That is the
logic of weak vs. strong conditions.
But since Peter Suber and I posted the distinction,
noting that both price-barrier-free access and
permission-barrier-free access are indeed Open Access
(OA), many of our colleagues have been contacting us to
express serious concern about the unintended pejorative
connotations of "weak."
As a consequence, to avoid this unanticipated and
inadvertent bias, the two types of OA cannot be named by
the logical conditions (weak and strong) that define
them. We soon hope to announce a more transparent,
unbiased pair of names. Current candidates include:
Transparent, self-explanatory descriptors:
USE OA vs. RE-USE OA
READ OA vs. READ-WRITE OA
PRICE OA vs. PERMISSION OA
Generic descriptors:
BASIC or GENERIC or CORE OA vs.
EXTENDED or EXTENSIBLE or FULL OA
SOFT OA vs. HARD OA
EASY OA vs. HARD OA
(My own sense it that the consensus is tending toward
BASIC vs. FULL OA.)
The ultimate choice of names matters far less than
ensuring that the unintended connotations of "weak"
cannot be exploited by the opponents of OA, or by the
partisans of one of the forms of OA to the detriment of
the other. Nor should mandating "weak OA" be discouraged
by the misapprehension that it is some sort of sign of
weakness, or of a deficient desideratum
The purpose of our joint statement with Peter Suber had
been to make explicit what is already true de facto,
which is that both price-barrier-free access and
permission-barrier-free access are indeed forms of Open
Access (OA), and referred to as such, and that virtually
all Green OA today, and much of Gold OA today, is just
price-barrier-free OA, not permission-barrier-free OA,
although we both agree that permission-barrier-free OA is
the ultimate desideratum.
But what Peter Suber and I had not anticipated was that
if price-barrier-free OA were actually named by its
logical condition as "Weak OA" (i.e., the necessary
condition for permission-barrier-free OA) then that would
create difficulties for those who are working hard toward
the universal adoption of the mandates to provide
price-barrier-free OA (Green OA self-archiving mandates)
that are only now beginning to grow and flourish.
In particular, Professor Bernard Rentier, the Rector of
the University of Liege (which has adopted a Green OA
self-archiving mandate to provide price-barrier-free OA)
is also the founder of EurOpenScholar, which is dedicated
to promoting the adoption of Green OA mandates in the
universities of Europe and worldwide. Professor Rentier
advised us quite explicitly that if price-boundary-free
OA were called "Weak OA," it would make it much harder to
persuade other rectors to adopt Green OA mandates --
purely because of the negative connotations of "weak."
Nor is the solution to try instead to promote
permission-barrier-free ("Strong OA") mandates, for the
obstacles and resistance to that are far, far greater. We
are all agreed that it is not realistic to expect
consensus from either authors, university administrators
or funders on the adoption of, or compliance with,
mandates to provide permission-barrier-free OA at this
time, and that the growth of price-barrier-free OA should
on no account be slowed by or subordinated to efforts to
promote permission-barrier-free OA (though all of us are
in favour of permission-barrier-free OA too).
So, as the label "weak" would be a handicap, we need
another label. The solution is not to spell it out
longhand every time either, as "price-barrier-free OA,"
etc. That would be as awkward as it would be absurd.
So we are looking for a short-hand or stand-in for
"price-barrier-free OA" and "permission-barrier-free OA"
that will convey the distinction without any pejorative
connotations for either form of OA. The two forms of OA
stand defined, explicitly and logically. They are now in
need of value-neutral names.
Suggested names are welcome -- but not if they have
negative connotations for either form of OA. Nor is it an
option to re-appropriate the label "OA" for only one of
the two forms of OA.
Stevan Harnad
Jean-Claude Guédon
Université de Montréal
Received on Sat May 03 2008 - 12:47:26 BST
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