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AIDS Treatment News
Access to NIH-Funded Research Information -- Public Comment Period to November 16, 2004
October 26, 2004 The U.S. National Institutes of Health is seeking public comment on a proposal for "establishing a comprehensive, searchable resource of NIH-funded research results and providing free access for all" -- but with important limitations. The proposal, summarized in a single page, is at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-04-064.html.
Basically, NIH plans to ask its grantees to submit a final manuscript to NIH after it has been peer reviewed, when it is accepted for publication. Six months after it is published (or sooner if the publisher agrees), NIH will publish it for free public access on its PubMed Central database, where it will be available without charge online. The New England Journal of Medicine strongly supported this proposal (with one exception) in an editorial on September 23, 2004, which indicates where much of the biomedical research field may be going at this time: "... NIH proposes that all publications that arise from NIH-sponsored research be made available free to the public within six months after they have been published. We applaud and endorse this effort; our actions speak for themselves. Since May 2001, we have offered the research articles we publish free on our Web site six months after the publication date, and this includes all research articles, not just those funded by the NIH. In addition, for more than two years we have provided everything we publish free to the 120 most economically disadvantaged countries in the world. ..." However, the Journal is concerned that the proposal is silent about copyright, which could allow commercial misuse of its materials, such as the widespread spam email recently citing the Journal to help sell human growth hormone for unapproved uses.
Comments on ProposalAccess to the results of biomedical research, most of it funded by taxpayers, has been a serious and increasing problem for years. The crux of the problem is that the journals, which seldom help fund the research, restrict the results in order to be able to charge for their publications, interfering with the free flow of biomedical information. The NIH proposal, much weakened over earlier versions, is in our view a step forward but a long way from fixing the problem.
Comment: New Idea for Selling Online AccessWhile exploring possibilities for selling access to articles on the Web, I came up with what appears to be a remarkable way to charge even very small amounts of money online, almost eliminating transaction costs and encouraging supporters to share paid access. This idea uses a self-reproducing payment code -- which seems to be new, and has more consequences than one might imagine. Since it may help writers, musicians, and other artists make a living from their work, I set up a Web site to describe it, www.MicropaymentSmartCodes.com.For journal publishers, this system would allow them to make large sales of online access that could then be broken up at will for resale to small organizations or individuals. The end user would have a short, secret code to pay for access to articles, even from publishers he or she had no prior relationship with. Publishers could charge whatever they wanted, as now. But this system would open the door to lower-price business models, by almost eliminating the transaction cost and hassle of individual sales, while automatically aggregating them into larger transactions that would interest publishers. Reselling access to individuals or other specialized markets could be a proper business, not just an afterthought of a different business entirely, as it is with most biomedical journals today. My summary and full article are at the Web site below; comments to aidsnews@aidsnews.org would be appreciated (please use the word "micropayment" in the Subject line, to bypass spam control). I have no business interest in this idea, but want to start a discussion in order to test and improve the design, and make it available for anyone interested. Any blog or other discussion forum will be announced at www.MicropaymentSmartCodes.com. Copyright 2004 by John S. James. Permission granted for noncommercial reproduction, provided that our address and phone number are included if more than short quotations are used.
This article was provided by AIDS Treatment News. It is a part of the publication AIDS Treatment News. |