On Apr 20, 2020, at 10:52 PM, Yaroslav Blanter
<ymbalt(a)gmail.com> wrote:
As an actively publishing researcher, I just know that mandating open
access publishing would mean that the author pays the (huge) publication
fee rather than the library pays the subscription. In an ideal world, the
universities would refund the fees, and will get subsidy from the
governments, In our real world, the researchers will have to pay everything
out of their own pocket, with some of them losing all possibilities to
publish, for the lack of funds. I tried to raise this before, and the
universal reply was that this is my problem, not the problem of the
society. I do not expect anything else this time.
Cheers
Yaroslav
On Mon, Apr 20, 2020 at 10:34 PM Shani Evenstein
<shani.even(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Jake, well written and nicely put.
Is this online somewhere, where we can share it further?
Best,
Shani.
-----------------------------------------------
*Shani Evenstein Sigalov*
* Lecturer, Tel Aviv University.
* EdTech Innovation Strategist, NY/American Medical Program, Sackler School
of Medicine, Tel Aviv University.
* PhD Candidate, School of Education, Tel Aviv University.
* Azrieli Foundation Research Fellow.
* OER & Emerging Technologies Coordinator, UNESCO Chair
<https://education.tau.ac.il/node/3495> on Technology,
Internationalization
and Education, School of Education, Tel Aviv University
<https://education.tau.ac.il/node/3495>.
* Member of the Board of Trustees
<https://wikimediafoundation.org/profile/shani-evenstein-sigalov/>,
Wikimedia
Foundation <https://wikimediafoundation.org/>.
* Chairperson, The Hebrew Literature Digitization Society
<http://www.israelgives.org/amuta/580428621>.
* Chief Editor, Project Ben-Yehuda <http://benyehuda.org>.
+972-525640648
On Mon, Apr 20, 2020 at 11:27 PM Pete Forsyth <peteforsyth(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Jake,
How can we most effectively support your excellent effort with this?
-Pete
--
Pete Forsyth
User:Peteforsyth on Meta, English Wikisource, English Wikipedia, etc.
On Mon, Apr 20, 2020 at 1:22 PM Tito Dutta
<trulytito(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
> Very well-written and well-supported by statistics. Thanks for sharing.
> Regards.
> User:Titodutta
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 21, 2020, 1:41 AM Jake Orlowitz <jorlowitz(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
> My Letter to the U.S. Office for Science and Technology Policy
regarding
a
> proposal for federally mandate open access to publicly-funded
research...
>
> ---
>
> Wikipedia is one of the ten most popular websites in the world. Each
month
> 200,000 editors improve over 6 million articles. This vital public
> information is viewed on 1 billion unique devices as our pages are
loaded
> by people around the globe 7,000 times per
second.
>
> Wikipedia is the "free encyclopedia", both in its open CC-BY-SA
licensing
> as well as the unpaid contributions of its
volunteer editors. Yet
> Wikipedia's hundreds of thousands of editors struggle to access
scholarly
>> research. And, if they are able to read and cite it, then hundreds of
>> millions of readers cannot verify or explore it for deeper research.
>>
>> Citations are the bridge between Wikipedia articles and a broader
> landscape
>> of reliable, secondary sources. Citations not only allow readers to
> verify
>> the reliability of the facts they find in Wikipedia; through
citations
>> readers can also deep-dive into any given
topic by exploring the
books,
>> scholarly publications, and news stories
referenced in an article.
>>
>> A recently released dataset of all citations with identifiers in
> Wikipedia
>> found that less than half of the official versions of scholarly
>> publications cited with an identifier in Wikipedia are freely
available
on
> the web. This chasm of for editors and for readers is a tragedy of
public
>> education and digital literacy.
>>
>> Just look at the most recent global catastrophe with Coronavirus. By
> April
>> 2020 the main articles on COVID-19 had received 50 million views.
>> Wikipedia's medical content--made up of more than 155,000 articles
and
1
> billion bytes of text across more than 255
languages--has been ranked
as
> one of the top-3 most viewed sources for
medical information on the
entire
> internet.
>
> References are essential to the public's trust in Wikipedia. Indeed,
> Wikipedia's medical content is supported by 757,855 references in
English
>> and 1,596,528 in other languages, for a total of 2,354,383 across all
>> languages. In English 168,985 have a PMID while 261,850 do in other
>> languages. This means at least 430,835 references are journal
articles.
>
> What happens when those journal articles lie behind a paywall? The
public
>> suffers from a dearth of good information to make decisions about
their
> lives
as independent citizens and members of a global community.
>
> As founder of The Wikipedia Library, I arranged partnerships with
dozens
> of
>> leading scholarly journals, to give Wikipedia editors free access to
> their
>> reliable content and so they would be able to do effective and
rigorous
>
research. This time-intensive process took 6 years to amass access to
only
> 1/5th of the most highly regarded academic publications. Frankly,
Wikipedia
> editors--volunteers who selflessly give of their intelligence and
passion
>> to educate--should not have to beg and borrow to access
publicly-funded
>
research. Readers should not hit paywalls when they are seeking
> citizen-supported knowledge.
>
> I implore you to make the bold but entirely reasonable decision and
ensure
> that taxpayers have access to the vital scientific and scholarly
studies
> that they themselves fund. This is not only
sensible, it is essential
to
> civic health, societal progress, and human
flourishing.
>
>
> Sincerely,
> Jake Orlowitz
> Founder of The Wikipedia Library
>
>
> ---
>
> "Public Access to Peer-Reviewed Scholarly Publications, Data and Code
> Resulting From Federally Funded Research"
>
>
>
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/02/19/2020-03189/request-for…
>>
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