Peter Murray-Rust’s posting about $400 study packs based on articles published 
with CC-BY rights statements opened my eyes to a part of OUP/ESA’s business 
plan I had missed—the use of time-stamped PDFs to make money from students of 
the teachers who use study packs that include articles by ESA authors in any of 
ESA’s four principal journals. OUP has slapped time stamps and notices of an 
ESA copyright on all articles in the four journals going back to 1908 for Ann. 
Ent. Soc. Amer. and  J. Econ. Ent, and to 1972 and 1965 for J. Med. Ent. and  
Envir. Ent.

This should be illegal, as well as ethically and morally unacceptable.  This is 
because ESA has no valid claim of copyright to articles published in its 
journals before it started requiring authors to sign over their copyrights to 
ESA in 1978.  Furthermore, JME, for its entire run of being published by 
Honolulu’s Bishop Museum (1964-1986), never required authors to sign copyright 
releases.  The handover of J. Med. Ent. to ESA resulted in the run from 
1987-date being copyrighted by ESA.
The magnitude of the deception of OUP claiming an ESA copyright on all articles 
that ever appeared in ESA’s four journals is that of ESA’s 271 “journal-years” 
of publication (through 2015 and including the first 22 journal-years of JME), 
ESA could fairly claim copyright to only 103 (103/271=38%).

That ought to be illegal, but is it? (The evidence is clear cut and online.)

Tom
====================================
Thomas J. Walker
Department of Entomology & Nematology
PO Box 110620 (or Natural Area Drive)
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-0620
E-mail: [email protected]      Phone: 352-273-3920
Web: http://entomology.ifas.ufl.edu/walker/
====================================

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Peter Murray-Rust
Sent: Monday, February 08, 2016 2:08 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Can time-stamped PDF's qualify as OA?

Following up,
I have checked the reuse permissions on OUP's Nucleic Acids Research (see 
previous mail) and they are charging large prices for re-use of CC-BY articles 
(e.g. 400 USD for use in an academic course pack for 100 students.
I hope this is a "glitch" (though I am getting very very tired of publisher 
glitches in their favour). If it is deliberate then although it is possibly 
legal - they can argue that a consumer can ignore their reprint permission 
charges - it is morally and ethically unacceptable.
I continue to point out such unacceptable practices. They will continue until 
the community also regards them as unacceptable and takes decisive action 
against unacceptable publishers.

On Mon, Feb 8, 2016 at 5:39 PM, Paul Royster 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear Dr Walker,

I infer that you are talking about the stamp: “Downloaded from 
http://jme.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on February 8, 2016” or equivalent that 
OUP pastes on every PDF it sends out? In practice, that stamp can be removed by 
Adobe Acrobat, though it takes a bit of practice and a delicate touch. (I won’t 
speak to whether such removal is within the bounds of any specific license 
agreement.) Those time stamps are an ugly imposition marring the pages of many 
content sources, including JSTOR, Hathi Trust, and others, and I deplore them. 
They remind me of dogs marking their territories.

Oxford’s website for the JME says < 
http://jme.oxfordjournals.org/for_authors/charges-licenses-and-self-archiving.html>
 that authors paying for Open Access under Oxford Open have a choice of 
CC-BY-NC (no commercial re-use) or CC-BY-NC-ND (no commercial, no derivatives) 
licenses. Under either of these, authors (who pay) have immediate license to 
post the Oxford (or ESA) pdf versions in their institutional repositories (or 
any other non-commercial uses). (Whether CC-BY-NC counts as “real” OA is a 
matter for discussion with the purists—most people would say it is, some more 
extreme advocates would not. It’s not clear to me whether it meets the strict 
BOAI standard or not; or even if that matters.)

Authors who do not pay for Oxford Open still “may upload their accepted 
manuscript PDF to an institutional and/or centrally organized repository, 
provided that public availability is delayed until 12 months after first online 
publication in the journal.” < 
http://www.oxfordjournals.org/en/access-purchase/rights-and-permissions/self-archiving-policyb.html
 > So authors may still take the “Green OA” route—though whether Green OA 
counts as “real” OA is another murky or muddled question for some.

Your article in Learned Publishing (2002)15, 279–284 < 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1087/095315102760319242/abstract > 
[though ironically not OA] made a clear and bold appeal for immediate free web 
access. I wish we had all been sooner to demand this of publishers and 
societies.

It is unfortunate the ESA has cast its lot with OUP. I hope its members will 
realize the impact and reconsider the arrangement. Meanwhile, we do a lot of 
entomology for our repository (including Insecta Mundi), and I would be happy 
to help you get your JME papers online, if you wish to contact me off-list. 
Best regards.

Paul Royster
Coordinator of Scholarly Communications
University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu<http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/>

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of 
Walker,Thomas J
Sent: Monday, February 8, 2016 7:04 AM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [GOAL] Can time-stamped PDF's qualify as OA?

In investigating the PDFs of articles in Journal of Medical Entomology [JME] 
published by Oxford University Press [OUP] I’ve found that OUP puts a time 
stamp on every PDF they provide to others.  This makes it impossible for 
authors, who have paid a fee or $2000 to $3500 for OA, to make a non-time 
stamped PDF openly accessible on the Web.

This is because even though OUP has granted copyrights to OA-fee paying 
authors, it requires the corresponding author of each article to sign (for 
himself and for any other authors of the article) OUP’s “License to Publish.”  
This License<http://entnemdept.ifas.ufl.edu/walker/OUP_License_to_Publish.pdf> 
states (in legal language) that OUP has the exclusive right to publish the 
article!  That would mean that authors could not legally post their copyrighted 
PDFs on their homepages.

In a draft of a paper about this practice, I’ve argued that OUP’s time-stamped 
PDFs should not qualify as OA:

All the meanings of OA that I am aware of would exclude PDF files that have 
been altered to prevent their being an unaltered copy of the printed pages of 
the version of record.  None of the PDF files in OUP’s archive are unaltered.  
I challenge anyone to find one PDF that is a true electronic version of the 
printed version of that article [which is the “version of record”].   Yet PDF 
files of journal articles are valued because they are unaltered scans of the 
pages of the paper version of the article.

But am I wrong and OUP’s PDFs meet current NIH standards for OA?

Tom
============================================
Thomas J. Walker
Department of Entomology & Nematology
PO Box 110620 (or Natural Area Drive)
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-0620
E-mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>     FAX: 
(352)392-0190<tel:%28352%29392-0190>
Web: http://entomology.ifas.ufl.edu/walker/
============================================



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--
Peter Murray-Rust
Reader in Molecular Informatics
Unilever Centre, Dep. Of Chemistry
University of Cambridge
CB2 1EW, UK
+44-1223-763069
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