I heartily agree. The publisher must balance access with preservation. A moving wall model is of no use to our research and teaching community whatsoever, it's just a barrier to progress.
Warmest regards,
Dominic Benson
--
[log in to unmask]
e-Resources Librarian, Brunel University Library, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UK, UB8 3PH
Tel: +44(0)1895 266143; fax: +44(0)1895 269742
-----Original Message-----
From: An informal open list set up by the UK Serials Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Lesley Crawshaw
Sent: 12 March 2007 17:03
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Rolling Archive Policy
Hi,
I agree with all that's been said so far and thanks to Louise for such a comprehensive response to INFORMS.
We were ready to go online only with INFORMS from 2007 until we discovered they had a rolling wall policy, backing up John's observations on this issue. If we hadn't been in correspondence with the publisher re: the move of these journals from Atypon to Highwire we would never have even known that their journals had a moving wall.
Interestingly we told Serials Solutions about this publisher's moving wall policy, but were told that on investigation the INFORMS web site "shows no evidence of this moving wall" and that they couldn't make changes "at the authority level unless we're aware it's affecting clients across the board".
Cheers
Lesley
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lesley Crawshaw, Faculty Information Consultant, Learning and Information Services University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, AL10 9AB ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: [log in to unmask]
phone: 01707 284662 fax: 01707 284666
list owner: [log in to unmask] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-----Original Message-----
From: An informal open list set up by the UK Serials Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of J.W.T.Smith
Sent: 12 March 2007 16:54
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Rolling Archive Policy
A further response to Patricia Shaffer.
Contrary to what Patricia Shaffer believes the normal rule that was adopted when e-journals began to be available in the mid-90s was that one retained access to that which one had paid for. This move to the idea of a 'rolling archive' is a blatant attempt to re-sell to us that which we have already paid for. Many publishers wonder why librarians are often negative about them - it is this kind of behaviour that elicits this negativity.
Many of us were looking forward to the time when we could free up space in our Libraries by disposing of little used back-runs and relying on e-access but with the arrival of this undesired development we may need to consider keeping our paper back-runs just so we can be sure we can provide access in the future.
Regards,
John Smith,
The Templeman Library,
University of Kent, UK
>
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>
> Patricia S. Shaffer writes:
>
> On January 10, Louise Cole of the University of Leeds expressed her
> concern abut INFORMS' rolling archive policy. Her concerns are serious
> and deserve an explanation, as well as appropriate action on our part.
> INFORMS current subscriptions, following an established publishers'
> standard, cover access for the current year plus four archive years
> (2007- 2003). Our online terms and conditions have always stated that
> INFORMS provides online service with a service period from January 1st
> to December 31st of the subscription year. Annual renewals are
> required for continued access to the current plus four years. The
> rolling access meshes with access to embargoed content through
> aggregators such as EBSCO, ProQuest and JSTOR. INFORMS has never
> restricted participation to specific aggregators, to ensure the
> broadest possible access to our archival content prior to the period covered in current subscriptions.
> The challenge has been to maintain those rules of access in place with
> our journal hosts; unfortunately, we were largely unsuccessful until
> we moved to HighWire.
>
> INFORMS faced a new challenge this year. The recent transition to
> HighWire as the host for INFORMS, where these rules are now actually
> in effect, would have discontinued access to the 2002 journal year to
> all 2006 subscribers after our grace period of February 15th.
> 2007-only subscribers are limited to issues beginning in 2003. Given
> the change in hosts and the inconsistent enforcement of the rules
> before moving to HighWire, we are setting a special policy for this
> year. INFORMS will extend access to current plus five years for 2007
> subscriptions (2007-2002). There will be no loss of access to 2002 issues for 2007 renewals and new subscribers.
>
> As Ms. Cole points out, INFORMS will indeed be introducing an archival
> product in the near future that will cover all issues back to volume
> 1, issue 1 for all our journals. This archive will offer hundreds of
> issues never before available electronically directly through INFORMS
> to libraries. The metadata is being rekeyed and organized to allow
> more in- depth searches at the keyword and abstract level. INFORMS
> plans to introduce the archives in two parts. Archive I will include
> issues from
> 1985 to the end of the coverage of a current subscription. Every year,
> the oldest year in the current subscription will become part of Archive I.
> This product will have a one-time purchase price and a modest annual
> maintenance fee. Archive II will cover issues from 1984-1952, and will
> offer the balance of issues from the six oldest INFORMS journals.
> Archive II will have a modest one-time fee to cover the administrative
> costs. Both archives will be hosted at HighWire and tracked in the
> usage reports, and will be available for abstract/keyword searches.
> Pricing and release dates are not yet finalized. INFORMS will publish
> this information when it is available.
>
> Once the archives are available for purchase, our subscription policy
> will revert to our current year plus four years access format. This
> policy was developed by our board, whose members were primarily
> academics, when INFORMS went online in 1999. The business rules are
> based on the observation that our most valuable research material is
> found in the current five years of journal articles. As noted above,
> the backfile articles are also available from several aggregators.
>
> Feel free to contact us with your concerns. If you have strong
> opinions about INFORMS journals, we'll even welcome you to an INFORMS
> library panel. Direct your comments to
>
> Patricia S. Shaffer
> Director of Publications
> Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences
> (INFORMS)
> (443) 757-3500 ext. 570
> [log in to unmask] <http://www.informs.org>
>
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