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United States Science

White House Pushes Journals To Drop Paywalls on Publicly Funded Research (nytimes.com) 39

Academic journals will have to provide immediate access to papers that are publicly funded, providing a big win for advocates of open research and ending a policy that had allowed publishers to keep publications behind a paywall for a year, according to a White House directive. The New York Times: In laying out the new policy, which is set to be fully in place by the start of 2026, the Office of Science and Technology Policy said that the guidance had the potential to save lives and benefit the public on several key priorities -- from cancer breakthroughs to clean-energy technology. "The American people fund tens of billions of dollars of cutting-edge research annually," Dr. Alondra Nelson, the head of the office, said in a statement. "There should be no delay or barrier between the American public and the returns on their investments in research."

Advocates for open-research access, like Greg Tananbaum, the director of the Open Research Funders Group, called the guidance "transformational" for researchers and the broader public alike. He said it built off a 2013 memorandum that was also important in expanding the public's access to research but fell short in some areas. The 2013 guidance applied to federal agencies with research and development expenditures of $100 million or more, about 20 of the largest agencies like the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. The guidance announced on Thursday covers nearly all federal bodies, a major expansion that includes about 400 or more entities, several experts said. The directive also requires that publications be made available in machine-readable formats to ensure use and reuse, a component that open-access advocates hailed as a game-changer for accessibility.

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White House Pushes Journals To Drop Paywalls on Publicly Funded Research

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  • Already happening? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by habig ( 12787 ) on Friday August 26, 2022 @01:08PM (#62825893) Homepage

    When I write up the annual report for an NSF grant, I must take the final, published pdf of any articles that were published with that grant's support and upload them to NSF. Go look at the NSF "Public Access Repository" for the complete collection of everyone who wrote something funded by NSF. That's a condition of getting money from the NSF, and if the original article is paywalled, the public can get it from the NSF. Maybe other agencies aren't that far ahead of the curve?

    And not even talking about arXiv.org, where all the physics and astro plus many math and CS articles go as e-prints at the same time as they're submitted to the journals in the first place.

    Of course, TFA about open access is paywalled so I can't see what the details are :)

    • NIH doesn't do that to my knowledge, and the NIH is the biggest funder to roughly ~$30B/yr vs. NSF $8.8B.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 )

      That's a condition of getting money from the NSF, and if the original article is paywalled, the public can get it from the NSF. Maybe other agencies aren't that far ahead of the curve?

      Let's not be cute here and try and put a curvy figure on the ugliness of Greed. That paywall wasn't some coding mistake by the geeks in IT.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      I don't think that the papers that we upload in NSF-PAR are made available externally anywhere. And I do believe that the current agreement is that NSF would not redistribute papers until a year after publication.

      NSF has the content once you do the annual report but I don't think it becomes accessible anywhere before a year. I put a random jeyword in and look at the first paper I got:
      https://par.nsf.gov/biblio/103... [nsf.gov]
      It says "Free Publicly Accessible Full Text
      This content will become publicly available on De

  • Delay (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Jerrry ( 43027 ) on Friday August 26, 2022 @01:18PM (#62825917)

    "There should be no delay or barrier between the American public and the returns on their investments in research."

    If that's the case, then why wait until 2026 to implement this?

    • "There should be no delay or barrier between the American public and the returns on their investments in research."

      If that's the case, then why wait until 2026 to implement this?

      Well, you know..there were probably a few publicly funded (as in taxpayer) articles written on it, so some may need a few more years to really craft that novel story about a virus.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      It's possible that the US have current agreements with publishers that expire in 2026.
      And in government only critical things move quickly. This is not a priority to implement and once it is done, it is done forever.

  • Now Patents (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Urganite ( 888467 ) on Friday August 26, 2022 @01:18PM (#62825919)
    This is a good start. Shame that all of the transformational research, that we've bought and paid for collectively, that can be usefully applied to, well, anything, will be patented for the exclusive benefit of corporations or university endowments (you know, those guys we're about to write a check for around $1T to for tuition?). Should we not be economic beneficiaries of publicly funded research?

    If we're going to be on the hook for research grants that result in valuable applications, should we not either get the ability to implement that into domestic products royalty-free, or take a cut of the royalties to fund the government's many, many money-hungry programs?
    • Iâ(TM)d rather see the feds tax all âoenon cost of attendanceâ revenue that universities take in any confiscatory rates, then give the universities $1 tax credits for each $1 they reduce tuition off 2018 levels. This means theyâ(TM)d have to use the tens of billions they take in due to sports, alumni donations, parents, and property donations to actually fulfill their educational mission instead of enriching admins

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Yeah, patents are more complicated. There is a significant effort between "I have a paper" and "I have a product". And that's the effort that patents are made to protect.

      Now I agree with you that a product developed by a faculty member of a public university should see the patent owned by the state or a combination of state and university; or if it federally funded research, by a combination of university, the state, and the federal government.

      But of course, it's messy. And universities are terrible at mana

  • by kyoko21 ( 198413 ) on Friday August 26, 2022 @01:40PM (#62825981)

    I feel like this is a vindication for what Aaron was fighting for.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday August 26, 2022 @01:42PM (#62825987)
    oh and UFOs. So far Biden has been hitting every note nerds should be all over.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Dark Brandon has entered the chat
  • The first link in the first sentence of the article referencing paywall rollback (in four years no less) sits behind a NYT paywall!
  • Perhaps on the the biggest scams has been the NEC [wikipedia.org]. This was paid for with tax payer funds, yet to this day is closed source and requires a license. Arguably you could say this is for national security (not likely), but if so, why is the license costs [llnl.gov] so different for different users?

    This is nothing but a cash grab at this point.

  • is this a joke?

    This could get canceled by the next prez

  • It should be a hard requirement, right now, that any publicly-funded research results are stored in the Library of Congress, and that every citizen/resident alien (humans, not saucer people) is granted free, unlimited access. That would also include free use of any patents.

    If we paid for it, we should be allowed to use it.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Well, it is kind of like that. Anything published that is funded by NSF get uploaded to NSF public access repository. It makes the papers available online a year after their publication.

      So while not ideal, it's already pretty decent and it is probably already going to kill publishers.

  • The current reality is that when we taxpayers fund basic research that results in patents, we are funding individuals who can become billionaires while we get no return on our investment.

    Some researchers at UCSD came up with a clever communication algorithm. The patent was issued to an individual who created Qualcomm and became a billionaire. He and various investors are still reaping billions from that humble start. What did the taxpayer get for their investment?

    How about those patented medicines that cost

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Some researchers at UCSD came up with a clever communication algorithm. The patent was issued to an individual who created Qualcomm and became a billionaire. He and various investors are still reaping billions from that humble start. What did the taxpayer get for their investment?

      While I agree with you, the taxpayer got a bunch of jobs. We got a bunch of new technology which made us more productive/happy/whatever. And all of the people involved did pay taxes that came back to the treasury. (Last year Qualcomm paid about $2B in income taxes according to a quick googling.)

      Now, maybe we'll collectively decide that this balance is unfair to the taxpayer. But let's not claim that the taxpayer is a net loser in that transaction.

  • Usually does not work out well. Look at Corrections Corporation of America (now GEO group). Plenty of fuck ups there.

Don't panic.

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