fatman wrote...
Such an act would hinder the original purpose behind the creation of the internet: for scientists to have a simpler method to share their findings.
Citation needed.
The original purpose of the internet is to provide the government and private groups with a hard-to-disrupt method of networking. It was not for civilians.
Admittedly, it was not intended for civilians, but it was developed to facilitate communication between researchers in the department of defense.
http://www.enotes.com/history/q-and-a/why-was-internet-created-288816
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Why_was_the_Internet_developed
This bill is a logical extension of that. Private research remains private. If you want in, pay for it.
JAMA (Journal of American Medicine) and just about every peer-reviewed journal asks you to pay if you want full access to their articles (at sometimes very high prices).
https://subs.ama-assn.org/ama/exec/subscribe
This law just reinforces that. The studies you currently see freely on the internet? Most of them are just abstracts, not the full body of the study. For the majority of scientific studies, you will have to pay to get a hold of. Of course, some studies are freely available online, but that's because the authors distributed it freely. This law prevents studies not distributed freely to be not distributed freely (gasp).
Yes, most articles are published in journals which charge a fee to view those articles. However, the publisher does not hold the right to do this with publicly funded research indefinitely. According to the NIH, all articles been publicly funded are to be made freely available after a 12 month period.
regardless of the fact that public funding is already paying for the research.
The bill covers private research, not public. From the article:
ensure the continued publication and integrity of peer-reviewed research works by the private sector", where the important phrase is "private sector"
The article is being stupid. Right after stressing "private sector", this part pops up:
This is a blatant attempt to invalidate the NIH's requirement that taxpayer-funded research be made publicly available
So, private sector research is now taxpayer funded?
The definition of "private sector" as per this bill is extremely broad. Saying that companies have a right to charge for viewing their works is fair, but the Research Works Act is going far beyond that. It considers all works which have received any private funding, even in the form of reviewing or peer-editing, to be immune to the NIH mandate.
And even if there were, here's a quote from the actual bill:
(3) PRIVATE-SECTOR RESEARCH WORK- The term `private-sector research work' means an article intended to be published in a scholarly or scientific publication, or any version of such an article, that is not a work of the United States Government (as defined in section 101 of title 17, United States Code), describing or interpreting research funded in whole or in part by a Federal agency and to which a commercial or nonprofit publisher has made or has entered into an arrangement to make a value-added contribution, including peer review or editing. Such term does not include progress reports or raw data outputs routinely required to be created for and submitted directly to a funding agency in the course of research.
I interpret that as "if it is federally funded, even in part then it isn't included"
I interpreted that as the opposite: if it is privately funded, even in part, then no government agency may force it to be made available for free at any point. As I mentioned in my OP:
works qualify as private sector if "a commercial or nonprofit publisher has made or has entered into an arrangement to make a value-added contribution, including peer review or editing."
That said, I will admit that the article could and should have specified more clearly the disconnect between the article's definition of "private sector" and general perception of the term.