Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Elsevier journals: has anything changed? (gowers.wordpress.com)
126 points by ColinWright on May 27, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 5 comments


Read it in full, and I'm not sure Elsevier deserved such as a classy resignation letter. He gives them just too much of a benefit of doubt, when I think it's bloody obvious that Elsevier has no interest in supporting open communication in the research community, simply because it chokes its cash cow.


It strikes me that the economics of product "bundles" seems to be one of those things that's just inherently hard for people to understand: http://www.isegoria.net/2010/04/paying-for-channels-you-neve...


I'm not convinced. If I start paying only for those channels that I actually do watch, this market signal is sent to the cable company and ultimately to the content producer. If there isn't enough demand for a show, they shouldn't be producing it in the first place. Bundling eliminates this signal and therefore allows the market to remain inefficient.

Every business has a fixed cost component. Content production would be no different


What? Then Pat Robertson would have to get a job.


It doesn't look like the academics who are protesting the matter misunderstand. They realize full well that they are the ones that bear the sunk cost. They're the ones --along with the universities that employ them, and in turn, the taxpayers who underwrite the universities-- who spent years of time and money to reach a level of competence that would permit them to produce and referee journal-quality work. And many still persist in volunteering their time even after that, such as Greg Martin here. They often even transfer copyright of their work over to the journal. This seems quite different from movie studios that are sure to charge quite the fee for access to their hard-earned experience and works, and sure as hell won't transfer copyright to theaters and movie stores once the work is complete.

What major sunk cost is the publisher carrying, directly or otherwise? Digital distribution? That's not a zero dollar cost, but it doesn't cost hundreds of millions of dollars either, even if they can find someone who'll quote such a price.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: