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Open Access & Author’s Rights -
      What every faculty or author
            should know…..


   H. Stephen McMinn, Director of Collections and
             Scholarly Communications
                 Brookens Library
Discussion Topics
Open Access              Your Rights as an Author
 What is it?             Protecting Your Rights
 Why is it important?    Publishers Copyright
 What’s in it for me?     Transfer Agreements
 What can I do?          Amendments
                          Creative Commons
                          IDEALS
What is Open Access?
       Open Access-Lots of Definitions

Open access (OA) -- the practice of providing
unrestricted access via the Internet to peer-
reviewed scholarly journal articles and other
scholarly works.
What do we mean by open?

             Open & Free to Access
Open to …
  Contribution and Participation

  Use & Reuse with Few or No Restrictions

  Indexing and Machine Readable
Open Movements
    Open Access -- Public Access
   Open data          Open books
   Open science       Open peer review
   Open humanities    Open textbooks
   Open education
Open Access Journals
Scholarly journals that are available online to
the reader "without financial, legal, or
technical barriers other than those
inseparable from gaining access to the
internet itself.“

                         Suber, Peter. "Open Access Overview".
             http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm
Levels of Open Access Journals
                Entirely open access
More    Open    All or some articles open
                 (hybrid open-access journals)
                Some articles open access and
                 others delayed access
                Delayed open access
                 (delayed open-access journals)
                Self-archiving of articles permitted
                No open content -- content only
                 available to subscribers
Less    Open
Types of Open Access
 “Green” Open Access
Authors publish in any journal and then self-archive a version of the
article for free public use in their institutional repository, in a central
repository (such as PubMed Central), or on some other OA website.

 “Gold” Open Access
Authors publish in an open access journal that provides immediate OA to
all of its articles on the publisher's website.

 Hybrid Open Access
Provide Gold OA only for those individual articles for which their authors
(or their author's institution or funder) pay an OA publishing fee.
Why Open Access?
 “Information wants to be free!”
 Unsustainable pricing model of scholarly
  journals
 Beliefs of the Academy – It’s the Right thing to Do!
 “Open access truly expands shared knowledge across scientific fields — it is the
best path for accelerating multi-disciplinary breakthroughs in research." 
— Open
              Letter to the US Congress signed by Nobel Prize winners

 Requirements of Funding Agencies
 Other Initiatives
NIH Public Access Policy
The NIH Public Access Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL
   110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008). The law states:


The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all
  investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them
  to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic
  version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance
  for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12
  months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH
  shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with
  copyright law

                  NIH Public Access Policy @ http://publicaccess.nih.gov
NIH Rules - In Brief
 NIH-funded research must be made freely
  available to the public
 Deposit made publicly available no later
  than 12 months after the official date of
  publication
 Authors submit an e-copy of their
  published articles to NIH PubMed Central
Other Initiatives
 Open Access -- Illinois General Assembly –
  SB Bill 1900
 America Competes Reauthorization Act of
  2010
 Increasing Access to the Results of Federally
  Funded Scientific Research – Presidential
  Policy Memorandum (2/22/13)
What’s in it for me?
 Ease of Use
  – Copyright
  – Coursepacks/Couse Management
  – MOOCs
 Increased Visibility
 Increased Citations
Increased Citations to
Open Access Articles
What can I do?
 Advocate for Open Access
 Publish in Open Access Journals
 Protect your rights as a author
  – What rights are important?
  – How to Protect Rights
 Use IDEALS (UI Institutional Repository)
Finding Friendly Publishers
 The Romeo/eprints directory provides
  information on the self-archiving policy of
  journals
  – Levels of “openness” in publishers agreements
  – www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/
 DOJA -- Directory of Open Access Journals
  – Used to find Open Access Journals
  – www.doaj.org
Sherpa/Romeo – 4 Levels
ROMEO                                                     Number of
         Archiving policy
colour                                                    Publishers
         can archive pre-print and post-print or
green                                                          366
         publisher's version/PDF

         can archive post-print (i.e. final draft post-
blue                                                           408
         refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF

yellow   can archive pre-print (i.e. pre-refereeing)           138


white    archiving not formally supported                      392
Other Useful Tools
 Sherpa/JULIET – Funders requirements
  – www.sherpa.ac.uk/juliet/
 Ask me or Ask a Librarian
  – http://libguides.uis.edu/librarians
Protecting Authors Rights
 What can you do with your article?
  – Publish on your website
  – Photocopy and pass out on street corners
  – Use in your course
  – Post to Subject Repositories
  – Submit to Journals
  – Tear up into little pieces and use for confetti
 May depend on Funding Source!
Important Rights - Copyright
 To publish/distribute work in print or other
  media
 To Reproduce/Copy
 Prepare Translations or Derivative Works
 To perform or display the work publicly
 To authorize others to have any of these
  rights – ability to transfer rights
Publishers Copyright Transfer
Agreements
 Historic Practice -- Transfer of ownership of
  copyright to publishers in exchange for
  publication despite the restrictions it places
  on your work
 Authors (you) would need to obtain
  permission from the publisher for any of
  the rights transferred……
Interpreting Agreements
What to look for….
  – Posting to websites
  – Use in course packs
  – Use in other works
  – Placing in Institutional or Subject Repositories
  – Allowed methods of sharing
  – Permissions statement
Questions to Consider
 What rights are your giving up?
 What rights are important to you?
 How important are these rights?
  Items to consider…
  ‒ Gov/Funder Rules/Regulations – NIH
  ‒ University Guidelines – Senate Resolutions
  ‒ Personal Preferences -- Open access
Retain Rights – 2 Options
 Retain only the Specific Rights You Need
       •     Right to use/copy for educational purposes
       •     Right to post to your website
       •     Right to re-use your own work in another work
   But otherwise transfer copyright to publisher
                               OR
  2.         Retain all Rights and License Specific Rights to
           the Publisher such as right of 1st publication
Methods to Retain Rights
1. Strike out the parts of the agreement that
   you wish to modify.
2. Insert in the text of the agreement the
   rights that you wish to retain.
3. Attach an addendum to the publishing
   agreement which expressly sets forth the
   rights retained by the author.
Editing Agreement
 Strike out wording
   – crossing out the specific clauses that you do not
     agree with and inserting by hand the rights you
     wish to retain.
 Review the publisher’s agreement form for….
“SIGN HERE FOR COPYRIGHT TRANSFER: I hereby certify that I
   am authorized to sign this document either in my own right or
   as an agent for my employer, and have made no changes to
   the current valid document. . .”
Editing Agreement
The following is an example:

“If there are any elements in this manuscript for which the
    author(s) hold and want to retain copyright, please
    specify: __________________________.”

[Physical Therapy, Journal of the American Physical Therapy
   Association]
Editing Agreements
 Any changes made directly on the form
  agreement must include….
  – the initials of the author and the initials of an
    authorized representative of the publisher, which
    are placed immediately adjacent to the
    handwritten or typewritten change.
  – Any changes made and initialed by the author will
    have no legal effect without the approval of the
    publisher.
NIH Example
Add the following to a copyright agreement

  “Journal acknowledges that Author retains the
  right to provide a copy of the final peer-reviewed
  manuscript to the NIH upon acceptance for
  Journal publication, for public archiving in
  PubMed Central as soon as possible but no later
  than 12 months after publication by Journal.”
Amendments to Agreements
 An addendum is an attachment to a
  contract or form that modifies, clarifies, or
  adds to the contract.
 If authors attach an addendum, add the
  statement “Subject to Attached
  Addendum” next to your signature on the
  publisher copyright agreement form.
 Lots of Examples of Amendments
Amendments
 Creative Commons - The Scholar’s Copyright
  Addendum Engine
  – http://scholars.sciencecommons.org/
 SPARC
  – http://www.arl.org/sparc/author/addendum.shtml
 CIC – Committee on Institutional Cooperation
  – http://www.cic.net/projects/library/scholarly-
    communication/introduction
Open Access and
Copyright/Creative Commons
 Open access is built upon authors retaining
  all or part of their initial rights under
  copyright law.
 Creative Commons is an easy way to
  transfer rights – they allow creators to
  communicate which rights they reserve,
  and which rights they waive for the benefit
  of recipients or other creators.
IDEALS - University of Illinois
Institutional Repository
 IDEALS is the digital repository for research
  and scholarship - including published and
  unpublished papers, datasets, video and
  audio - produced at the University of
  Illinois.
 All faculty, staff, and graduate students can
  deposit into IDEALS.
              (https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/)
Q&A + Links
 SPARC
      • http://www.arl.org/sparc/

 ACRL Scholarly Communications
      • http://www.ala.org/acrl/issues/scholcomm

 University of Illinois – Author’s Rights Page
      • http://www.library.illinois.edu/sc/services/scholarly_communication
        s/your_rights.html

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Open Access and Authors Rights

  • 1. Open Access & Author’s Rights - What every faculty or author should know….. H. Stephen McMinn, Director of Collections and Scholarly Communications Brookens Library
  • 2. Discussion Topics Open Access Your Rights as an Author  What is it?  Protecting Your Rights  Why is it important?  Publishers Copyright  What’s in it for me? Transfer Agreements  What can I do?  Amendments  Creative Commons  IDEALS
  • 3. What is Open Access? Open Access-Lots of Definitions Open access (OA) -- the practice of providing unrestricted access via the Internet to peer- reviewed scholarly journal articles and other scholarly works.
  • 4. What do we mean by open? Open & Free to Access Open to … Contribution and Participation Use & Reuse with Few or No Restrictions Indexing and Machine Readable
  • 5. Open Movements Open Access -- Public Access  Open data  Open books  Open science  Open peer review  Open humanities  Open textbooks  Open education
  • 6. Open Access Journals Scholarly journals that are available online to the reader "without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself.“ Suber, Peter. "Open Access Overview". http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm
  • 7. Levels of Open Access Journals  Entirely open access More Open  All or some articles open (hybrid open-access journals)  Some articles open access and others delayed access  Delayed open access (delayed open-access journals)  Self-archiving of articles permitted  No open content -- content only available to subscribers Less Open
  • 8. Types of Open Access  “Green” Open Access Authors publish in any journal and then self-archive a version of the article for free public use in their institutional repository, in a central repository (such as PubMed Central), or on some other OA website.  “Gold” Open Access Authors publish in an open access journal that provides immediate OA to all of its articles on the publisher's website.  Hybrid Open Access Provide Gold OA only for those individual articles for which their authors (or their author's institution or funder) pay an OA publishing fee.
  • 9. Why Open Access?  “Information wants to be free!”  Unsustainable pricing model of scholarly journals  Beliefs of the Academy – It’s the Right thing to Do! “Open access truly expands shared knowledge across scientific fields — it is the best path for accelerating multi-disciplinary breakthroughs in research." 
— Open Letter to the US Congress signed by Nobel Prize winners  Requirements of Funding Agencies  Other Initiatives
  • 10. NIH Public Access Policy The NIH Public Access Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL 110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008). The law states: The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law NIH Public Access Policy @ http://publicaccess.nih.gov
  • 11. NIH Rules - In Brief  NIH-funded research must be made freely available to the public  Deposit made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication  Authors submit an e-copy of their published articles to NIH PubMed Central
  • 12. Other Initiatives  Open Access -- Illinois General Assembly – SB Bill 1900  America Competes Reauthorization Act of 2010  Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research – Presidential Policy Memorandum (2/22/13)
  • 13. What’s in it for me?  Ease of Use – Copyright – Coursepacks/Couse Management – MOOCs  Increased Visibility  Increased Citations
  • 14. Increased Citations to Open Access Articles
  • 15. What can I do?  Advocate for Open Access  Publish in Open Access Journals  Protect your rights as a author – What rights are important? – How to Protect Rights  Use IDEALS (UI Institutional Repository)
  • 16. Finding Friendly Publishers  The Romeo/eprints directory provides information on the self-archiving policy of journals – Levels of “openness” in publishers agreements – www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/  DOJA -- Directory of Open Access Journals – Used to find Open Access Journals – www.doaj.org
  • 17. Sherpa/Romeo – 4 Levels ROMEO Number of Archiving policy colour Publishers can archive pre-print and post-print or green 366 publisher's version/PDF can archive post-print (i.e. final draft post- blue 408 refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF yellow can archive pre-print (i.e. pre-refereeing) 138 white archiving not formally supported 392
  • 18. Other Useful Tools  Sherpa/JULIET – Funders requirements – www.sherpa.ac.uk/juliet/  Ask me or Ask a Librarian – http://libguides.uis.edu/librarians
  • 19. Protecting Authors Rights  What can you do with your article? – Publish on your website – Photocopy and pass out on street corners – Use in your course – Post to Subject Repositories – Submit to Journals – Tear up into little pieces and use for confetti  May depend on Funding Source!
  • 20. Important Rights - Copyright  To publish/distribute work in print or other media  To Reproduce/Copy  Prepare Translations or Derivative Works  To perform or display the work publicly  To authorize others to have any of these rights – ability to transfer rights
  • 21. Publishers Copyright Transfer Agreements  Historic Practice -- Transfer of ownership of copyright to publishers in exchange for publication despite the restrictions it places on your work  Authors (you) would need to obtain permission from the publisher for any of the rights transferred……
  • 22. Interpreting Agreements What to look for…. – Posting to websites – Use in course packs – Use in other works – Placing in Institutional or Subject Repositories – Allowed methods of sharing – Permissions statement
  • 23. Questions to Consider  What rights are your giving up?  What rights are important to you?  How important are these rights? Items to consider… ‒ Gov/Funder Rules/Regulations – NIH ‒ University Guidelines – Senate Resolutions ‒ Personal Preferences -- Open access
  • 24. Retain Rights – 2 Options  Retain only the Specific Rights You Need • Right to use/copy for educational purposes • Right to post to your website • Right to re-use your own work in another work But otherwise transfer copyright to publisher OR 2. Retain all Rights and License Specific Rights to the Publisher such as right of 1st publication
  • 25. Methods to Retain Rights 1. Strike out the parts of the agreement that you wish to modify. 2. Insert in the text of the agreement the rights that you wish to retain. 3. Attach an addendum to the publishing agreement which expressly sets forth the rights retained by the author.
  • 26. Editing Agreement  Strike out wording – crossing out the specific clauses that you do not agree with and inserting by hand the rights you wish to retain.  Review the publisher’s agreement form for…. “SIGN HERE FOR COPYRIGHT TRANSFER: I hereby certify that I am authorized to sign this document either in my own right or as an agent for my employer, and have made no changes to the current valid document. . .”
  • 27. Editing Agreement The following is an example: “If there are any elements in this manuscript for which the author(s) hold and want to retain copyright, please specify: __________________________.” [Physical Therapy, Journal of the American Physical Therapy Association]
  • 28. Editing Agreements  Any changes made directly on the form agreement must include…. – the initials of the author and the initials of an authorized representative of the publisher, which are placed immediately adjacent to the handwritten or typewritten change. – Any changes made and initialed by the author will have no legal effect without the approval of the publisher.
  • 29. NIH Example Add the following to a copyright agreement “Journal acknowledges that Author retains the right to provide a copy of the final peer-reviewed manuscript to the NIH upon acceptance for Journal publication, for public archiving in PubMed Central as soon as possible but no later than 12 months after publication by Journal.”
  • 30. Amendments to Agreements  An addendum is an attachment to a contract or form that modifies, clarifies, or adds to the contract.  If authors attach an addendum, add the statement “Subject to Attached Addendum” next to your signature on the publisher copyright agreement form.  Lots of Examples of Amendments
  • 31. Amendments  Creative Commons - The Scholar’s Copyright Addendum Engine – http://scholars.sciencecommons.org/  SPARC – http://www.arl.org/sparc/author/addendum.shtml  CIC – Committee on Institutional Cooperation – http://www.cic.net/projects/library/scholarly- communication/introduction
  • 32. Open Access and Copyright/Creative Commons  Open access is built upon authors retaining all or part of their initial rights under copyright law.  Creative Commons is an easy way to transfer rights – they allow creators to communicate which rights they reserve, and which rights they waive for the benefit of recipients or other creators.
  • 33. IDEALS - University of Illinois Institutional Repository  IDEALS is the digital repository for research and scholarship - including published and unpublished papers, datasets, video and audio - produced at the University of Illinois.  All faculty, staff, and graduate students can deposit into IDEALS. (https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/)
  • 34. Q&A + Links  SPARC • http://www.arl.org/sparc/  ACRL Scholarly Communications • http://www.ala.org/acrl/issues/scholcomm  University of Illinois – Author’s Rights Page • http://www.library.illinois.edu/sc/services/scholarly_communication s/your_rights.html

Editor's Notes

  1. Many of these new access models are driven by the concept of “open” which encompasses a lot of meanings:More open for both creators and usersGreater openness by way of removing access barriers, such as subscriptionsGranting rights up front to enable sharing and reuseAnd creating opportunities for new forms of technology-enabled scholarship and data mining to move forward
  2. There are multiple open explorations within the broader ethos of openness, most of which should be familiar to you. The largest of these is obviously open access, both publishing and archiving. A derivative movement of open access is the public access requirements we are seeing from grant agencies. However, there is strong growth in these other, related movements and ultimately they all support and drive one another and our scholarship.
  3. In successively looser senses, open-access journals may be considered as: Journals entirely open access Journals with research articles open access (hybrid open-access journals) Journals with some research articles open access (hybrid open-access journals) Journals with some articles open access and the other delayed access Journals with delayed open access (delayed open-access journals) Journals permitting self-archiving of articles
  4. Green OA Self Archiving[5][6]Authors publish in any journal and then self-archive a version of the article for free public use in their institutional repository,[7] in a central repository (such as PubMed Central), or on some other OA website.[8] What is deposited is the peer-reviewed postprint – either the author's refereed, revised final draft or the publisher's version of record. Green OA journal publishers[9] endorse immediate OA self-archiving by their authors. OA self-archiving was first formally proposed in 1994[10][11] by Stevan Harnad. However, self-archiving was already being done by computer scientists in their local FTP archives in the '80s,[12] later harvested into Citeseer. High-energy physicists have been self-archiving centrally in arXiv since 1991.Gold OA Publishing[13]Authors publish in an open access journal that provides immediate OA to all of its articles on the publisher's website.[8] (Hybrid open access journals provide Gold OA only for those individual articles for which their authors (or their author's institution or funder) pay an OA publishing fee.) Examples of OA publishers[13] are BioMed Central, the Public Library of Science, and Dove Medical Press.
  5. he iconic phrase is attributed to Stewart Brand.[1] who, in the late 1960s, founded the Whole Earth Catalog and argued that technology could be liberating rather than oppressing.[2] The earliest recorded occurrence of the expression was at the first Hackers' Conference in 1984. Brand told Steve Wozniak:[3]On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. The right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time. So you have these two fighting against each other.[4]
  6. Open Access Bill SB1900 -- The summary states: "Creates the Open Access to Research Articles Act. Provides that no later than 12 months after the effective date of the Act, each public institution of higher education shall develop an open access to research articles policy. Provides that all public institutions of higher education shall develop policies that provide for the submission, by all faculty employed by the public institution of higher education, to the employing institution of an electronic version of the author's final manuscript of original research papers upon acceptance by a scholarly research journal; the incorporation of certain changes and replacements regarding the manuscript; free online public access to the final peer-reviewed manuscripts or published versions upon publication; an irrevocable, worldwide copyright license granted by the author to the public; production of an online bibliography of all research papers that are publicly accessible; and long-term preservation of, and free public access to, published research articles. Sets forth provisions concerning applicability, other policy requirements, and reporting requirements.“America Competes Reauthorization Act of 2010 calls upon OSTP to coordinate with agencies to develop policies that assure widespread public access to and long-term stewardship of the results of federally funded unclassified research (2011)Expanding Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded ResearchPosted by Michael Stebbins on February 22, 2013 at 12:04 PM ESTThe Obama Administration is committed to the proposition that citizens deserve easy access to the results of scientific research their tax dollars have paid for. That’s why, in a policy memorandum released today, OSTP Director John Holdren has directed Federal agencies with more than $100M in R&D expenditures to develop plans to make the published results of federally funded research freely available to the public within one year of publication and requiring researchers to better account for and manage the digital data resulting from federally funded scientific research. OSTP has been looking into this issue for some time, soliciting broad public input on multiple occasions and convening an interagency working group to develop a policy. The final policy reflects substantial inputs from scientists and scientific organizations, publishers, members of Congress, and other members of the public—over 65 thousand of whom recently signed a We the People petition asking for expanded public access to the results of taxpayer-funded research.To see the new policy memorandum, please visit: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/ostp_public_access_memo_2013.pdfTo see Dr. Holdren’s response to the We the People petition, please visit: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/response/increasing-public-access-results-scientific-researchhttp://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=127043
  7. Creative Commons (CC) is a non-profit organization headquartered in Mountain View, California, United States devoted to expanding the range of creative works available for others to build upon legally and to share.[1] The organization has released several copyright-licenses known as Creative Commons licenses free of charge to the public. These licenses allow creators to communicate which rights they reserve, and which rights they waive for the benefit of recipients or other creators. An easy to understand one-page explanation of rights, with associated visual symbols, explains the specifics of each Creative Commons license. Creative Commons licenses do not replace copyright, but are based upon it. They replace individual negotiations for specific rights between copyright owner (licensor) and licensee, which are necessary under an "all rights reserved" copyright management with a "some rights reserved" management employing standardized licenses for re-use cases where no commercial compensation is sought by the copyright owner. The result is an agile, low overhead and cost copyright management regime, profiting both copyright owners and licensees.