Privacy 2.0: Give a little, take a little

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010

A special report on social networking

Jan 28th 2010 | From The Economist print edition

IF THERE is one thing that could halt the ascent of social networks, it is the vexed question of privacy. This is controversial because it goes right to the heart of the social-networking business model. In order to attract users, sites need to offer ways for members to restrict the information about themselves that gets shared with a wider public. Without effective controls people would be reluctant to sign up. But if a site allows members to keep too much of their information private, there will be less traffic that can be turned into profit through advertising and various other means, so the network’s business will suffer... More

Open Courseware and revenue gain for Universities

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010
A PhD dissertation by Justin Johansen approved by Brigham Young University (BYU) in October 2009 showed that open courseware projects can produce a net revenue gain for universities.  (Later this month another BYU student, John Hilton, defend the similar thesis that OA books can produce net revenue gain for publishers.)
http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd3317.pdf
http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/1231

DOAJ Humanities and Social Science Journals

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010
A new study showed that 78% of the social science and humanities journals listed in the DOAJ are not indexed in any of five major SSH journal indices:  the Arts and Humanities Citation Index (AHCI), Social Science Citation Index (SSCI), Scopus, European Reference Index for Humanities (ERIH), and Agence pour l’Evaluation de la Recherche et de l’Enseignement Supérieur (AERES).
http://www.cybergeo.eu/index22862.html

Some South African works that entered the public domain in 2010

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010
Andrew Rens released a partial list of works that entered the public domain in 2010 under South African law.
http://aliquidnovi.org/2010/01/02/new-works-in-the-south-african-public-domain/

PubMed: how to find articles that are free online

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010

* Jim Till showed how to use the PubMed Advanced Search option to estimate the number of papers based on research by a given funder are free online.  (His immediate purpose was to estimate how many CIHR-funded papers, which ought to be OA, are actually OA.)
http://tillje.wordpress.com/2010/01/08/preliminary-data-about-cihr-supported-publications-cited-in-pubmed/

* Heather Morrison showed how to use the PubMed Advanced Search option to estimate the number of papers published in a given journal are free online.  In a separate post she showed how TA medical journals with green policies (allowing authors to self-archive) can measure or estimate the number of their articles on deposit in OA repositories.
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2010/01/calculating-compliance-with-nih-public.html
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2010/01/for-subscription-journals-calculating.html

 

From SPARC Open Access Newsletter

Happy 9th Birthday Wikipedia; and guess who is citing it now?

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010

* Wikipedia celebrated its ninth birthday.
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2010/01/15/another-year-wiser/

* More than 800 patents issued by the US in 2009 cited one or more Wikipedia articles, an increase of 59% from 2008.
http://patentlibrarian.blogspot.com/2010/01/wikipedia-citations-in-patents-up-59.html

 

From: SPARC Open Access Newsletter

Journals Using Open Journal Systems by Continent

Posted by Celia Walter | 4 Feb, 2010

From:  

http://mallikarjundora.wordpress.com/2010/02/01/journals-using-open-journal-systems-by-continent/