Alex, It is my understanding 17 USC 105 was amended to expand the scope. The amendment was attached to another funding bill and I am trying to track that down. I am aware that the "Public Information in Science Act" HR 2613 is stuck in committee. Peer review as I am suggesting would not be limited to a relatively small group. I imagine that all publications could be vetted by use. That is to say in an electronic format one could see precisely how many cites refer to the article and for what points. Another imaginative approach would be to publish everything and then let the entire community of scholars vet it on several dimensions. Accuracy, clarity, cohesiveness, grammar, point made, method etc. Keep in mind I am brainstorming. What would happen if everybody on the listserv were allowed to publish what they select as there best work and then let the entire community rate it. As to Einstein, No doubt, he was often his own enemy. However old world prejudices kept his work out of circulation. It was only when they could no longer ignore him that he got recognition. The history of science is replete with stories like this. It appears that, the more revolutionary the thinking, the greater the resistance. Max Planck was fond of saying, to his colleagues and students "Do your own thinking." He was saying always question scientific and intellectual authority. He was saying that just because many people hold an idea doesn't make it right. Current practices, in my view, give too much up to conventional wisdom (even in intellectual circles). Social customs and structures tend to impede innovation and creativity. Part of my irreverence is that I understand the humanness of scientists and their jealousies and biases. Of course I can make these outstanding proposals because I am at the end of my career. I don't have the same personal concerns. Reid -----Original Message----- From: air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org [mailto:air-l-bounces@listserv.aoir.org] On Behalf Of Alex Halavais Sent: Monday, September 11, 2006 2:10 PM To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org; wrc@tcfir.org Subject: Re: [Air-l] Open access publishing (was a modest proposal) On 9/11/06, Dr. W. Reid Cornwell <wrc@tcfir.org> wrote:
Open access with regards to publicly funded research is the "Law." It includes "all" agencies that fund research including the quasi-governmental labs like Sandia etc. (excluding those that are covered under official security restraints)
Sorry, but that's simply not the case in the US, at least. I think you are thinking of 17 USC 105, which opens up documents produced by the federal government. Among a host of other exceptions, when the federal government contracts with private individuals or companies, the work may be copyrighted, and usually is.
This law preserves the peer reviewing process. I personally am in favor of scrapping peer review in favor an intellectual community rating system.
That's a good definition of peer review. Perhaps you are suggesting a different way of doing peer review. There are lots of ways to provide for such checking.
Peer review has been used for too long as a mechanism of social control and exclusion.
That's its central function. And I don't think anyone can argue that the internet means we have LESS need of filters. On the contrary, now more than ever we need ways of verifying the work of others. Google is also a mechanism of social control and exclusion. That's why we use it.
I frequently think of Einstein and his travails at recognition until he got a socially accepted champion.
That Einstein didn't happen to like peer review doesn't change its relative effectiveness. (Indeed, there have been arguments that he would have made progress more quickly had he more often engaged critical reviewers comments.) At the same time, the ramblings tens of thousands of ill-informed random quacks were filtered out. No one claims that peer review is perfect; on the contrary, I think most recognize it is broken in important respects. But it serves a vital function, and until other social processes can improve on these functions, it will continue to be employed. Unfortunately, I suspect that one of the reasons open access has been retarded so often is that many equate open access with scrapping the social technologies (like peer review) that tend to work pretty well. Note that this doesn't preclude efforts to make peer review better, and I applaud efforts like Nature's to experiment with open review (http://blogs.nature.com/nature/peerreview/trial/). And I think that Wikipedia provides a model of how open peer-review can do pretty OK, most of the time. Though Wikipedians are the first to note that it needs to be done better. More on that shortly :). - Alex -- // // This email is // [ ] assumed public and may be blogged / forwarded. // [X] assumed to be private, please ask before redistributing. // // Alexander C. Halavais // Social Architect // http://alex.halavais.net // _______________________________________________ The air-l@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/