Setting aside individual publishers' rules about posting pre-prints to a /personal/ site, I've wondered for some time why publishers have not yet gone after Academia.edu, which is not a personal site, but a centralized social network built in part on top of a lot of copyright violations. It's YouTube all over again. - Rob Robert W. Gehl Assistant Professor, Department of Communication Affiliated Faculty, University Writing Program The University of Utah www.robertwgehl.org | @robertwgehl Sent from our OS on our Internet Watch for my book, Reverse Engineering Social Media, from Temple in 2014 On 12/07/2013 08:28 AM, Jen Jack Gieseking wrote:
To determine exactly what versions of papers you are allowed to post publicly per contracts, you can use the Sherpa Romeo database to search copyright policies of most journals in a clear, easy to understand format: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/. JJG
-- Jen Jack Gieseking, Ph.D. Postdoctoral Fellow in New Media and Data Visualization Digital and Computational Studies Initiative, Bowdoin College jgieseking@gmail.com www.jgieseking.org www.spatiallyinclined.org @jgieseking <https://twitter.com/jgieseking>
On Sat, Dec 7, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Michael Zimmer <zimmerm@uwm.edu> wrote:
Precisely.
-- Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Director, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee e: zimmerm@uwm.edu w: www.michaelzimmer.org
On Dec 7, 2013, at 6:21 AM, Joseph Reagle <joseph.2011@reagle.org> wrote:
On 12/06/2013 10:41 PM, Michael Zimmer wrote:
Whoever wrote this isn't very familiar with publisher copyright transfer agreements. Some publishers often distinguish between the author's draft and the final peer reviewed and paginated version. That is, posting a draft on your site (or to SSRN, say) is permissible, copying the final version is not. Hence I'm curious as to which these removed versions were?
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