The enclosures continue

By Michael J. Smith on Friday December 30, 2011 11:56 AM

Here's a fun piece:

Academic Publishers: Suicide Bombers Against the Academy

I lost my marbles the other day when I saw this article from Cambridge University press offering to rent me some academic articles:

For just £3.99, $5.99 or €4.49, users are now able to read single articles online for up to 24 hours, a saving of up to 86 per cent, compared with the cost of purchasing the article.
Of course, you can’t save, print, or do anything with the article except read it on line, then it disappears. What useless crap! Say you’re doing some research and you need a citation. $5.99 might be OK if you only needed one article. But the average academic article has 20-100 citations. And honestly, a good article is not something you read once and have done with it – you need to check it a few times and do some re-reading to absorb it. So this rental is really just a ‘teaser’ – it’s just enough access to decide if you really need to have something, after which you have the privilege of buying one of these articles for $30-$75. Yes, that’s really how much they charge! For one fucking article!

... Let me call your attention to American hero Aaron Swartz of hacktivist group Demand Progress, who downloaded 4 million articles from JSTOR from the MIT servers using anonymous logins and automated programs. JSTOR and the university freaked out and called the cops, and now Swartz faces federal charges and up to 35 years in prison. Not for disseminating the information, just for downloading it. But ‘theft is theft’ said the MIT administration. JSTOR bills itself as a harmless public repository of knowledge - as long as you don't want too much of it.

The copyright zealots who make it their business to restrict access to the world’s artistic, musical, and visual patrimony are perverts. Two hundred years ago these guys would have been hanging hungry people for stealing food. Under the logic of copyright, the miracle of the loaves and fishes would be theft from the bakers and the fisherman, and Jesus and his disciples criminals who should pay $1 million per loaf illegally downloaded from heaven. Who cares if we can make an infinite amount of bread, and a lot of people are hungry? Think of the rights of the bakers!

Of course I have mixed feelings about the title. If it's really true that academic publishers are 'suicide bombers against the academy' then there's a side of me that's inclined to cheer them on. But the larger point is a good one: the enclosure of 'intellectual property' continues apace. Much of what is enclosed is probably pretty valueless, but not all of it. I often enough find my unaffiliated nose pressed against the glass at Mordor-Upon-Charles, to wit, JSTOR, for some monograph on an obscure aspect of mediaeval music or Greek prosody that I would actually like to read.

Comments (3)

op:

jstor !!!!! slowly i turn

indeed that fat goiter of a growth blocks access
to all the major voodoonomical journals

and merit class egg and cone head types
love this sifting process ... of course

they have freely issued and re issued
e-library passes from their
institute or university

Christopher:

Theft is theft; you can't just give away knowledge! Where would we be if information was just available to anybody who wanted to study it?

My school uses a service called "academic readers" which is a process where teachers tell this website what articles they'd like to use in their classes, presumably pay for the right to do so, and then we students pay $70 for 300 pages of spiral bound photocopies on pretty ordinary printer paper. As far as I can tell from the variances between the readers, the teachers probably make the photocopies themselves.

Every one comes complete with little copyright warning noting that doing it this way is the only way to do it.

lord knows what would happen if the teachers at my $35K a year school just handed out chapters from Negative Space all willy-nilly.

Incidentally, where do these article fees go? How much gets back to the authors?

MJS:

Zilch.

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