Elsevier is the only scholarly publisher among the membership of NetChoice, which seeks to ātear down barrier to eCommerceā, and whose other members also include Facebook, NewsCorp, eBay and Facebook.
The of a series of blog postings aimed at ātracking the worst internet laws in Americaā sees NetChoice attack bills recently introduced into the state legislatures of California, Illinois and North Dakota that would establish open-access mandates for publicly-funded research.
The posting also targets the directive on open access recently published by the White House, which tasks all federal research funding agencies with establishing their own open access mandates.
The article says such mandates would ādeny in-state professors the opportunity for high-profile publications in paid journals, decreasing their chances for exposure and career advancementā. They would also āmake it harder for in-state universities to attract and retain professors and researchers keen to publish their work in paid journalsā.
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The proposals would also āset a precedent for state control over creative productions where any government employees played even a minor roleā and could see states asserting copyright over items such as āa violin professorās sheet music or audio recordingsā.
The posting was highlighted by Peter Suber, director of the Harvard Universityās Open Access Project, on his blog. He describes the arguments as a ācrude bolus of false assertions and assumptionsā and compares their āmotivated distortionā to that of the Research Works Act: a bill to outlaw open-access mandates introduced into the US Congress in late 2011.
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·”±ō²õ±š±¹¾±±š°łās initial support for that bill prompted thousands of academics to sign a pledge, known as the , to boycott the company.
But ·”±ō²õ±š±¹¾±±š°łās vice-president for global corporate relations, Tom Reller, said no one at the firm had seen NetChoiceās offending article before it was posted. He described its language as āstrange, sloppy and not oursā.
He said Elsevier had expressed to NetChoice its āserious concern about the tone and contentā of the posting and the ālack of transparency in the process by which [it] was developedā.
Mr Reller added that NetChoice had confirmed the article was written by its executive director āwithout specific review or input from its membersā, and had agreed to put a statement on its website clarifying that its content ādoes not necessarily represent the views of all of its membersā.
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In a on 15 May on the Elsevier Connect website, Mr Reller says Elsevier supports open access, but believed that ālegislative mandates such as the inflexible, one-size-fits-all post-publication embargo periods proposed in [California] are not economically sustainable for publishers and will undermine the peer review systemā.
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