Nemo, thanks for your work on this!  What scripts are you using to generate the emails, and how can we help?  S

On Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 4:16 PM, John G. Dove <johngdove@gmail.com> wrote:
Federico,  et. al., 

    I'm am 'over the moon' getting this e-mail from my brother today.  I've used my brother as an example of a scholar who has always done science as a contribution to society and would want to share his works if he knew that he needed to and knew how. He serves on the National Academy of Sciences as well as the Royal Academy of Sciences in Belgium. He's been publishing in scholarly journals since the early 60s and he's still an active researcher at 80 years old. 

   I've envisioned his getting an e-mail like this ever since waking up from a dream on 24 May, 2015 after having read Peter Suber's book on Open Access. In the dream it struck me that there's a point in time when a publisher (in this case Wikipedia) has an interest for their readers to have an excellent reading experience (and isn't this the mission of any publisher???) and an interest in reaching authors who are experts in the fields in which they publish.  And that authors of have an interest in having an impact on the audiences that the publisher is reaching.

    Peter, do you remember when I told you about some of my brother's paper still being cited that were published before the NIH mandates were in place?   I told you that he considers them to be shared because they all are on his department's website.  You told me that I should tell my brother to submit them to the UWisconsin I.R.   And I said, "I'm not interested in solving my brother's specific open access problem.  I want to see a systematic way of reaching my brother and all the other scholars so that they are motivated to do share appropriately."  
     My brother is currently having to type with one hand and write with his previously non-dominant hand.  But you notice in his message to me that he's truly motivated to now put all of this papers under a creative commons license.

      I think I'll only suggest that he click on the dissem.in link. Someone like him should be able to take that path and be successful.
       I'll watch and report back.

-John Dove

PS:  I'm at the Conference of Open Access Scholarly Publishers meeting starting tomorrow.  You all have given me a wonderful boost.   I'm going to be socializing the idea that other publishers could follow Wikipedia's lead on this.  I've come prepared with reference lists from several gold open access publishers including PLoS, MDPI, and Hindawi. 


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: William Dove <dove@oncology.wisc.edu>
Date: Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 2:31 PM
Subject: Fw: Open Access via Wikipedia
To: John Dove <johngdove@gmail.com>, 
Cc: William Dove <dove@oncology.wisc.edu>


hi john,

  i am "babe in the woods" on this.  please advise what is best for me to do to make each of my publications (*) available under Creative Commons.

  onward,

bill (dove)


From: Federico Leva - WMI <info@wikimedia.it>
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2017 1:08 PM
To: William Dove
Subject: I found your work on Wikipedia but it could be more accessible
 

Dear William Dove,

as a volunteer Wikipedia editor, I found your RETROSPECTIVE James F. Crow (1916-2012)
(doi:10.1126/science.1219557)
cited in an English Wikipedia article.

However, I did not easily find a copy that I could access and share.
On the Dissemin page about your work I found that your publisher's policies allow you to make it available for everyone now (green open access).
With a couple clicks on Dissemin you can now deposit your manuscript in Zenodo (hosted by CERN): as an author, you just have to click the upload button and select the relevant PDF from your disk. Dissemin takes care of all the metadata for you.

I need an open access copy to be able to discuss it with fellow editors and make sure the Wikipedia article provides an accurate and neutral overview under a free license for everybody to use. We also want every user who reads Wikipedia to be able to verify its content by consulting its primary sources. (See the Wikipedia pillars.)

On Dissemin you can also click your name from the work's page or search your name to find all your known works which are already available or could be made available. Dissemin will ask you to login via ORCID: you may already have an ORCID account from your institution, but if not you can easily signup and create your unique author identity.

When asked to choose a copyright license for your work, please consider that "libre" Open Access is especially helpful to grow free knowledge resources like Wikipedia: at Wikimedia we prefer the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike (CC BY-SA) license, or the CC BY.

If you have already deposited your works elsewhere, please contact your librarians or the administrators of your repository so that they can investigate why BASE/oaDOI fail to direct users to your archived version. They may also be able to help you archive your works if you are not able to do it yourself.

Finally, for more information on Open Access, we recommend the SPARC Open Access website and Peter Suber's how-to at Harvard.

If you found Dissem.in useful, please forward to all your co-authors and colleagues.

Kind regards,

Federico Leva
(Wikimedia Italia association member)

P.s.: This message is sent to your address as relevant feedback about the publication which provided it. Dissemin is run by the independent CAPSH association in France.


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