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petersuber
@petersuber@fediscience.org  路  activity timestamp 5 days ago

I'm sympathetic to #NIH-funded authors who want to publish in certain #APC-based #OpenAccess journals and can't find the money to pay the APCs. But it's false to say that they must publish in those journals, in any other APC-based OA journals, or even in OA journals. Shame on _Inside Higher Ed_ for leaving this false impression..
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/faculty-issues/research/2025/12/05/nih-policy-holding-researchers-hostage

PS: I repeat: Compliance with the NIH OA policy is free of charge. Moreover, compliance is all about depositing in a certain repository, not publishing in a certain journal or kind of journal. The NIH has a #GreenOA policy, not a #GoldOA policy. The same is true for all the other federal agencies with OA policies, not just the NIH. When a journal charges NIH-funded authors an APC to publish, the fee is to publish in that particular journal, not to comply with the NIH policy. Don't be fooled by the widespread misunderstanding that compliance with these policies requires paying any kind of fee. Don't be fooled by journals and publishers that cynically spread this myth themselves or leave it uncorrected. You can help by correcting this falsehood wherever you see it. You can also help by working with hiring, promotion, and tenure committees to care more about the quality of research than the journals in which it is published.

馃У

#APCs #NelsonMemo #NIH #OpenAccess #OAintheUSA #PublicAccess #Repositories

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petersuber
@petersuber@fediscience.org replied  路  activity timestamp 5 days ago

Update. Here's a footnote to the previous post in this thread.

The article does say that "the NIH policy doesn鈥檛 require authors to publish in journals that charge APCs [and that] plenty of reputable, fully open-access journals exist." But it buries this statement at the end of the article and leads with this false one about a particular NIH-funded researcher: "If she wants her work to comply with a new NIH policy to expedite public access to federally funded research鈥he may have to start paying even more [in the form of APCs]." The article never says that compliance with the policy is free of charge or that APCs are never necessary for compliance.

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