Welcome to the Free Online Scholarship (FOS)
Newsletter
October 19, 2001
Follow-up on journal editor resignations
* If you're just tuning in,
last week we reported that 40 editors of
_Machine Learning Journal_ resigned in order to protest the subscription price
and online access policies of its publisher, Kluwer. One of the editors,
Leslie Pack Kaelbling, created the _Journal of Machine Learning Research_ (JMLR)
as a free online alternative.
* Some corrections and further details to the story have been posted to our
discussion forum and others have come in by private email. Here are the
highlights. Robert Holte, executive editor of MLJ, reports that about a
third of the MLJ editors did not resign, considerably more than the "handful" I
described. Holte also points out that Kluwer now allows author
self-archiving and gives free online access to its own copies of accepted MLJ
articles, though only until the articles appear in print. However, Kluwer
didn't tell Holte about this change of policy until October 11, after the 40
editors' public letter of resignation. It appears that the resignations,
or perhaps the public letter explaining them, triggered a policy change that
Kluwer would not have made otherwise. Leslie Pack Kaelbling, editor of
JMLR and my source for the story, agrees that Kluwer's new online access policy
is a very reasonable one. She says that if MLJ had allowed author
self-archiving earlier, she would not have resigned from MLJ or launched
JMLR.
Robert Holte's response to last week's article and to the public letter of
resignation
* Paul Ginsparg of arXiv and Leslie Pack Kaelbling exchanged some emails
about JMLR's costs and how it meets them. I was copied in and can offer
this summary. Since JMLR receives no revenue from MIT Press, its editorial
costs are not subsidized by the subscription fees MIT collects for the print
edition of the journal. Editors and reviewers generally donate their
time. Authors do their own PDF formatting. Fixed costs like the
domain name, software, and legal fees for creating a non-profit corporation,
will be more than covered by donations already in hand or committed.
Network space is donated by the MIT AI Lab, where Kaelbling works. While
MLJ published about 50 papers per year, JMLR started with 11 papers last year
and will double that this year. JMLR received 150 papers last year, and
spent about 600 editor-hours processing them.
* In the postscript to last week's story, I asked whether there were other
cases like _Machine Learning_, the _Journal of Logic Programming_, and
_Evolutionary Ecology_ in which the editor or editorial board resigned to
protest the publisher's high subscription price and formed a new
journal.
George Porter of CalTech's Fairchild Library of Engineering & Applied
Science wrote to tell me about Henry Hagedorn's resignation as editor of the
_Archives of Insect Biochemistry & Physiology_ (Wiley-Liss) in order to form
the _Journal of Insect Science_ (University of Arizona library). JIS is a
free online journal with no print edition. It plans to offset the costs of
online publication with author fees. As with the other cases, its birth
and early survival were assisted by SPARC.
Henry Hagedorn's public letter of resignation and call for change
[old journal] Archives of Insect Biochemistry & Physiology
[new journal] Journal of Insect Science
* Here's a better link than the one I published in the last issue for the
background on Michael Rosenzweig's resignation from _Evolutionary Ecology_ in
order to launch _Evolutionary Ecology Research_.
What will it profit you to gain [free online scholarship] and lose your
very [connectivity]? Luke 9:25.
Is the internet really vulnerable to massive failure from deliberate
attacks? I admit that this is one scenario about the risk of FOS for which
I have no ready answer. I can say that such attacks are unlikely.
But is this just wishful thinking? I can say that FOS relies on
distributed archives which cannot all be destroyed, even if the connections
among them are temporarily severed. But I don't really know the maximum
destructive potential of viruses and worms. I can say that we shouldn't
slacken our efforts to enhance research and education just because these efforts
could be undermined by determined wrongdoers. If that consideration could
suspend FOS initiatives, then it could suspend all constructive activity.
But clearly I cannot say that FOS would still be useful if the internet itself
were deeply unreliable or largely destroyed. Worse than useless, a shift
to FOS could be dangerous if we let other forms of publication atrophy and then
experienced a digital apocalypse.
So far I haven't heard any critic of FOS or lobbyist for commercial
publishers call for a pause until the internet can be hardened against
attack. But it's healthy to anticipate the objection and think about how
to answer it. (How could you persuade a clay-tablet culture to make the
move to paper at a time when some prognosticators fear arson?)
How reasonable is the fear? How likely are terrorist attacks on the
internet? How vulnerable is it to attack? Here are the views of
eight people who have studied the problem. (I cite the sources
below.)
Steve Bellovin, security expert for AT&T: "There is a substantial
risk of someone taking out the internet. That capability absolutely
exists."
Bruce Schneier, security and encryption expert now with Counterpane
Internet Security: "The Internet is not as robust as people think.
Among security people, it's well-known --someone could take out enough of the
thing so it's all gone, for weeks or months."
Dave Dobrotka, former security system administrator for the U.S. Air
Force's Information Warfare Center: "I've seen reports comparing computer
readiness of the Internet to airport security before the terrorist
attacks."
Alan Paller, Director of the System Administration, Networking, and
Security (SANS) Institute: "The Internet is simply not ready because of
these vulnerabilities; we're not ready to withstand a major attack."
William Wulf, president of the National Academy of Engineering:
"Frankly, I was simply appalled by how very little progress [on network
security] had been made in the past 15 years....We have to think about an active
defense. Everything we have done so far has been passive."
Richard Forno, CTO for Shadowlogic and consultant to the Defense Department
on information warfare: "I'm just not impressed with the overall United
States government infrastructure assurance effort."
Report from the National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC):
"Although the cyber protests seen today have already caused limited damage, the
potential for future attacks could bring about large economic losses as well as
potentially severe damage to the national infrastructure, affecting global
markets as well as public safety."
John Tritak, Director of the U.S. Critical Intrastructure Assurance Office
(CIAO): "Infrastructure owners and operators have always had primary
responsibility for protecting their physical assets against unauthorized
intruders. Yet these measures, however effective they might otherwise be,
were generally not designed to cope with significant military or terrorist
threats."
Keith Epstein, Taking Out the Net (Bellovin and Schneier
quotations)
Howard Wolinsky, Cyber-jihad could be chaotic, even deadly (Dobrotka
quotation)
Patrick Thibodeau, FBI, SANS Institute: Internet 'not ready' for
attack (Paller quotation)
Dan Carnevale, Congress is Urged to Spend More on Research Into Ways to
Counter Cyberterrorism (Wulf quotation)
Michelle Delio, Cyberwar Foundering on Feuds? (Forno quotation)
Brian Krebs, FBI Warns Of Increased Hacktivism, Cyber Protests (NIPC
quotation)
October 4 Senate testimony of John S. Tritak, Director of the U.S.
CIAO (Tritak quotation)
* Postscript. On May 22, 1998, Bill Clinton signed Presidential
Decision Directive #63, which created the National Infrastructure Protection
Center (NIPC) and its Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office (CIAO).
Michelle Delio (cited above) reports that there are now turf wars between
Clinton's NIPC and Bush's Homeland Security Office, which interfere with efforts
to protect U.S. infrastructure. Here are some additional links on internet
vulnerability and protection.
National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)
NIPC report on the threat to the U.S. information infrastructure (October
2001)
Critical Intrastructure Assurance Office (CIAO)
Clinton Administration white paper behind Presidential Decision Directive
63
George Bush's panel to prevent cyberterrorism
Institute for the Advanced Study of Information Warfare
EPIC's Critical Infrastructure Protection Resources
The SANS Institute, The Twenty Most Critical Internet Security
Vulnerabilities, Version 2.100 (October 2)
Vulnerability Notes Database from the CERT Coordination Center
The National Institute of Standards and Technology recently awarded $5
million in grants to improve internet security.
(Just $5 million?)
Infoshop.org's page on Info War, Netwar, Cyberwar
(not up to date)
* PPS. Would terrorists take down the internet if they need it for
communication and organization? I don't know. Maybe those who use it
are at odds with those who are terrified by post-medieval life, including the
Taliban who banned the internet completely from Afghanistan in July (see
FOSN
for 7/17/01). But the evidence is that many terrorist groups do use the
internet.
* PPPS. As I go to press, the AP is reporting that President Bush
wants to change the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) so that details about
attacks on computer networks need not be made public. This is intended to
encourage the reporting of attacks on private companies, which might lose
business if their customers thought them vulnerable. If the loss of this
FOIA information will hinder research into internet security, then this move
puts corporate PR ahead of national security and the public interest.
netLibrary on the block
netLibrary has failed to find funding and started looking for a
buyer. netLibrary hosts 33,000+ ebooks to which libraries can purchase
access, after which the library's patrons can borrow the ebooks electronically,
subject to the usual rules of borrowing periods and simultaneous users.
Librarians are worried that, if netLibrary goes out of business, then the ebooks
for which they have paid licenses will simply disappear.
Some libraries apparently anticipated this development and have terms in
their netLibrary contracts allowing them to keep the ebook files they have
licensed along with software to read them. But other libraries did not
apparently bargain to include these terms in their agreements.
Earlier this year, netLibrary struck a deal with OCLC, although its exact
bearing on a netLibrary bankruptcy is not clear. The copy of the agreement
on the netLibrary site says only that OCLC will store back-up copies of
netLibrary's ebooks. But the copy of the agreement at OCLC says that each
netLibrary customer will receive a copy of the entire netLibrary inventory,
along with software to read it, in case netLibrary goes out of business.
Some librarians posting to the ERIL list believe that the OCLC bail out only
affects libraries who paid extra for it.
Public statement from Rob Kaufman (President and CEO) and Rich Rosy (VP),
from the LibLicense email list
OCLC copy of the netLibrary-OCLC agreement
netLibrary copy of the net-Library OCLC agreement
Jeffrey Young, E-Book Provider netLibrary Puts Itself Up for Sale, Worrying
Librarians
Erika Stutzman, NetLibrary put up for sale
Richard Crocker, NetLibrary Fails to Attract Investment, Looks for
Buyer
netLibrary
----------
Developments
* Next month, Oxford's Refugee Studies Centre (RSC) will put its Forced
Migration Digital Library online. The archive consists of RSC's own
collection of grey literature along with material from Tufts University’s
Feinstein International Famine Center and Columbia University’s Program on
Forced Migration. The result will be the world's largest archive on
refugees and on forced migration.
David Cohen's report in the _Chronicle of Higher Education_
Oxford's Refugee Studies Centre
RSC description of the Forced Migration Digital Library
* On October 10, the three DOI Registration Agencies (CrossRef, Content
Directions, and Enpia Systems) demonstrated the commercial potential of
DOI's. The demonstrations showed that DOIs can facilitate the sale of
digital content and track the distribution of copyrighted material.
(PS: A DOI is an identification code for a digital object like an online
article, book, or book chapter. The DOI system is neutral technology that
helps both FOS and commercial publishers. DOI's help FOS by providing the
infrastructure for automatic reference linking, permanent URLs, and the
retrieval of metadata to accompany any content of interest. They help
commercial publishers by supporting DRM and access rules.)
* Openly Informatics has released 1Cate adapter, the first commercial
software to assist digital libraries in implementing CrossRef citation
links.
* The Ashcroft Justice Department has filed a motion to dismiss Edward
Felten's claim that he has a First Amendment right to publish his encryption
research (see
FOSN for 8/16/01). The DOJ motion does not argue that
Felten's claim is without merit, only that it is premature because Felten has
not been prosecuted. Felten is asking a federal court for a "declaratory
judgment" (legalese for a declaration) that he has a First Amendment right to
publish his research precisely so that he needn't fear, or wait for,
prosecution. (Download warning: the government motion is 1.6
MB.)
* Graham Allen, a Labour MP, has proposed that every new bill, after its
first reading, be posted to the internet for two months of public comment before
the House of Commons can take it up for further action.
* The University of Central England's Center for Information Research has
launched eVALUEd, a project to evaluate e-libraries in higher education and
their practices.
* Amazon.com now offers a smidgen of free online content. Its new
"Look Inside" program lets you look at sample pages before deciding whether to
buy. This would be like book shopping in meatspace except that the number
of sample pages is limited and you don't get to pick the pages to view.
Right now, 25,000 books have sample pages online, with more to come.
Amazon can't offer more than its cooperating publishers want to offer, of
course. But in deciding whether the cooperating publishers are being
generous or chintzy, it's worth remembering that National Academy Press lets web
users sample *all* pages of its books before (or instead of) buying. NAP
insists that this practice increases its sales (see
FOSN for 9/14/01). Now
NAP doesn't publish fiction. Is there any reason to think that its policy
of free online access will work better for its line of research non-fiction than
for Amazon's best sellers in fiction and general non-fiction?
----------
New on the net
* Between now and March 2002, you are invited to take part in a virtual
symposium, "Screens and networks: towards a new relationship with the
written word." Every two weeks starting October 15, a new paper will be
posted to the symposium web site and discussed electronically by the symposium's
speakers and other participants. The first paper, now under discussion, is
Roger Chartier's "Readers and Readings in the Electronic Age." If you
register, you can receive the papers and discussion postings by email and
(apparently) post your own discussion comments. At its completion, the
symposium will be published in electronic form and as a printed book. The
symposium is hosted by the Bibliothèque publique d'information (BPI), Centre
Pompidou, the Institut Jean Nicod (CNRS), and EURO-EDU, with additional funds
from GiantChair.com and UNESCO.
* The September 11 Archive is now online (see
FOSN for 9/21/01). It
consists of web pages submitted at the archive site or bookmarked by volunteers
with a javascript button they download to their browser toolbar. The
archive is sponsored by Alexa Internet, the Internet Archive, the Library of
Congress, the Pew Internet and American Life Project, WebArchivist.org.
* A beta version of the September 11 Television Archive is now
online. This is a collection of multi-lingual, worldwide TV broadcasts
from September 11-17 as well as scholarly and op-ed commentaries on the TV
coverage from that period. The broadcasts are viewable in RealPlayer or
QuickTime format, and visitors may write reviews of each clip. It's
definitely creepy to take current knowledge back to the moment of discovery, and
watch (for example) the hosts of "Good Morning America" chat merrily with Fergie
about her latest diet, then cut to a commercial, return with live pictures of
the first WTC tower burning, and struggle to understand what they are seeing
until the second plane comes into view.
* The American Bar Association has collected links to vendors of law books
and research services willing to help law libraries in New York and Washington
recover from the September 11 attacks by donating replacement volumes, research
assistance, and temporary passwords.
* JISC and DNER have announced an online index of the _London Times_ from
1790 to 1980. Access will not be free, although institutions may sign up
for a free 90 day trial.
* MedLine Plus has created a sub-archive of news and research articles on
chemical and biological weapons.
* The proceedings of the July conference at Stanford on the Semantic Web
are now online.
* The second beta of the dbXML Core XML database is now online and
downloadable. The dbXML Core is a native XML database, written in open
source Java, designed to manage an archive of XML documents.
* The National and University Library of Iceland, Cornell University, and
the Árni Magnússon Institute have launched Saganet, a free online archive of
medieval Icelandic literature, including the sagas. The archive includes
380,000 manuscript pages and 145,000 printed pages, both primary sources and
pre-20th century critical studies.
* The proceedings of the May conference in Atlanta, Virtual Libraries in
the New Millenium, are now online.
* On October 25 or 26, tune in to Ian Witten's webcast, Browsing Around A
Digital Library.
* Steve Baldwin Associates has created The Museum of E-Failure, an archive
of web pages from dead dot-coms.
* The July-September issue of eCulture just came out. Email
subscribers got their issues this week. The web version should be at this
URL, but wasn't yet online when I send this issue.
----------
In other publications
* In the October 15 _DigiNews_, William Lund compares the available
products to help build digital collections, and offers his library's criteria
for selecting the most useful.
* Also in the October _DigiNews_, Maria Bonn reviews the costs and methods
of the University of Michigan's huge digitization project, The Making of
America. The Mellon Foundation funded the project in part to see the
collection digitized and in part to generate this report on how to do it and how
much it costs.
* In the October 12 _Chronicle of Higher Education_ Andrea Foster
interviews Jessica Litman, author of _Digital Copyright_ (Prometheus Books,
2001). Litman argues in her book that the DMCA reflects the interests of
publishers and ignores the interests of readers and consumers. Quoting
Litman, "If people on a widespread basis simply disrespect the copyright law,
then all copyright owners are the losers, and I'm hoping they'll be realistic
about that, and go back to the drawing board and come up with something a little
more reasonable."
Table of contents and excerpts from Litman's book.
* In the October _RLG Focus_, Steve Hensen gives an overview of the RLG
Cultural Materials alliance, an integrated virtual collection (not free) built
from the sub-collections of many member libraries. David Richards
describes the system's infrastructure and how it is built.
* In the October _D-Lib Magazine_, Brewster Kahle, Rick Prelinger, and Mary
Jackson argue that universal digital access is attainable. "Currently, the
technology has reached the point where scanning all books, digitizing all audio
recordings, downloading all websites, and recording the output of all TV and
radio stations is not only feasible but less costly than buying and storing the
physical versions." For a near-term strategy they propose a combination of
copyright conservancies, digital interlibrary loans, and direct digital
lending.
* Also in the October _D-Lib_, Kevin Boyack, Brian Wylie, and George
Davidson show how software tools for visualizing or mapping internet content by
topic can illuminate the scholarly landscape. In their worked example,
they use the maps to conclude that researchers are neglecting certain rich
opportunities for interdisciplinary study. But apart from their example,
they show one more service that can be brought to bear on scholarly literature
once it is freely accessible online as data to pass to increasingly
sophisticated software. It's the best recent proof that we have barely
begun to imagine how to realize the full potential of the internet for research
and scholarship.
* Also in the October _D-Lib_, Ian Witten, David Bainbridge, and Stefan
Boddie review Greenstone, the open source software system for digital
libraries.
* Also in the October _D-Lib_, Sally Jo Cunningham reports on the 5th
European Conference on Digital Libraries (September 4-9 in Darmstadt), and
Christine Borgman and Heather Hessel report on the First Joint Conference on
Digital Libraries (June 24-28 in Roanoke).
* In the October _Charleston Advisor_, Irvin Muchnik has an op-ed about
writing and publishing in the Post-Tasini world.
* In October OCLC and RLG released their joint working group report on
preservation metadata.
* In the September 10 _Forbes_, Daniel McFadden describes a tragedy of the
commons in the online world of commercial content. Free online content is
a public good, but its value to individuals is too "dispersed and small" to
induce them to pay the costs of creating and organizing it. So its quality
degenerates. As a result, he predicts more AOL and Microsoft in our
future, and less free online content. (PS: By focusing on commercial
content, he doesn't mention a similar but different enclosure of the commons for
scholarship. Research articles are donated by their authors as if to the
academic commons; but they become the private property of journal publishers who
deprive the public of free access.) McFadden won the 2000 Nobel Prize in
economics.
* Miriam Schconik has posted to the web her doctoral dissertation on
e-readers, the dedicated reading platforms for ebooks. In the dissertation
she explores how adults read ebooks differently from pbooks, and what kinds of
reading are best suited to these platforms. Her results are based on a
survey of 105 people. (Download warning: the dissertation is 2.2
MB.)
* ARL has posted to its web site the report for Phase II of its project to
measure the use and value of electronic resources.
----------
Catching up
* In August, CLIR put online its report, _Building and Sustaining Digital
Collections: Models for Libraries and Museums_.
* In July, DLF and CLIR put online Tim Jewell's report on how research
libraries manage (select, license, present, and support the use of) their
digital collections, especially those with components provided by commercial
vendors.
* In June, NIH launched ARCHIVE-COMM-L, a listserv for its Image Archive
Steering Committee. The primary list topic is the archiving of digital
medical images.
----------
No comment
Lobbyists for the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), with
the support of the Motion Picture Association of America, proposed an amendment
to the recently passed anti-terrorist act that would have immunized copyright
owners from liability for hacking into private computers in order to delete
files that violate their copyrights. Aides to Senator Patrick Leahy
rejected the amendment before the Senate voted on the act. The RIAA
believes the new law "unintentionally" prohibits an anti-piracy tool available
to the industry under current law.
----------
On October 16, Topica lost both the newsletter and discussion forum.
Visitors were told that neither list even existed. This was a temporary
problem with its server, but it's another reason why I'm looking for a new
host. If you can help, please send me an email. Here are my
criteria.
----------
Conferences
If you plan to attend one of the following conferences, please share your
observations with us through our discussion forum.
* Collections & Access for the 21st Century Scholar: A Forum to
Explore the Roles of the Research Library
Washington, D.C., October 19-20
* Intellectual Property Rights in the Knowledge-Based Economy
Washington, D.C., October 22
* International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications
2001
Tokyo, October 22-26
* e-Book Lessons: From Life-Cycle to User Experiences
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 23
* Fourth Meeting of the [NAS] Committee on Intellectual Property Rights
(only parts are open to the public)
Washington, D.C., October 23-24
* Document Security and Digital Rights Management (an ALPSP Seminar)
London, October 26
* Copyright Issues in the Electronic Age
Waltham, Massachusetts, October 29
* Paperless Publishing: Peer Review, Production, and
Publication
Washington, D.C., October 30
* The XML Revolution: What Scholarly Publishers Need to know
Waltham, Massachusetts, November 1
* Information in a Networked World: Harnessing the Flow
Washington D.C., November 2-8
* Long Term Archiving of Digital Documents in Physics
Lyon, November 5-6
* Electronic Book 2001: Authors, Applications, and
Accessibility
Washington D.C., November 5-7
* Internet Librarian 2001
Pasadena, November 6-8
* Content Summit 01: Funding opportunities for European digital
content on global networks
Zurich, November 7-9
* Setting Standards and Making it Real (on Digital Reference
Services)
Orlando, November 12-13
* First Annual Meeting of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium
Pisa, November 16-17
* ARL Workshop for Publishers: Licensing Electronic Resources to
Libraries: Understanding Your Market
Philadelphia, November 19
* European Forum on Harmful and Illegal Cyber Content
Strasbourg, November 28
* eGovernment [in Europe]: From Policy to Practice
Brussels, November 29-30
* Digital Media Revolution in the Americas
Pasadena, November 29 - December 1
* School for Scanning: Creating, Managing, and Preserving Digital
Assets
Delray Beach, Florida, December 3-5
* Online Information 2001
London, December 4-6
* The Electronic Library: Strategic, Policy and Management
Issues
Loughborough, December 9-14
* 4th International Conference of Asian Digital Libraries
Bangalore, December 10-12
----------
The Free Online Scholarship Newsletter is supported by a grant from the
Open Society Institute.
==========
This is the Free Online Scholarship Newsletter (ISSN 1535-7848).
Please feel free to forward any issue of the newsletter to interested
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FOS home page, general information, subscriptions, editorial position,
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Guide to the FOS Movement
Peter Suber
Copyright (c) 2001, Peter Suber