Science and Research Content

ARL joins 60 other organisations opposing STM model licenses, recommends Creative Commons as alternative -

The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) along with almost 60 other organisations joined in a letter opposing model licenses recently released by the International Association of Scientific, Technical & Medical Publishers (STM). The letter's signatories are calling for STM to recommend to its member publishers that they work within the Creative Commons framework instead of offering their own customised open access licenses, which increase confusion and decrease interoperability with existing open licenses.

Creative Commons (CC) licenses are the de facto global standard for open content licensing and have been adopted by a broad-based community, including providers of open access publishing, government data and public sector information, educational resources, and creative content. These CC licenses have been developed and refined in a transparent manner by a diverse range of legal experts from around the world. Authors and users of research content should have straightforward, easy-to-understand legal tools to promote sharing and increase access to scholarly and scientific research. CC licenses also meet many funding requirements to enable unrestricted re-use of the licensed work as long as there is appropriate attribution.

The full letter can be found on the Public Library of Science (PLOS) website and other organisations are encouraged to sign the letter there.

Click here to read the original press release.

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