Greetings.
There is an important debate happening in Slashdot on the above topic:
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/09/16/208247
Summary:
"
A policy that mandates public, open access to all National
Institutes of Health research is in danger. The House of
Representatives is considering legislation that would change the open access policy
to make it more publisher-friendly, under the false pretense of
protecting copyrights. The Ars author paints the new legislation as
somewhat reflective of a turf battle in Congress: 'The Intellectual
Property Subcommittee clearly felt that it had been ignored during the
original passage of the bill that compelled the NIH's open access
policy...' The article concludes: 'Currently, the disruptions wrought
by the Internet and expectations of open access are too new for a
viable alternative to traditional publishing to have emerged. But it
doesn't appear that the NIH policy is making a significant contribution
to that disruption, and the benefits of the policy appear likely to be
significant. If Congress rolls back that policy in response to
disagreements with other countries over film piracy, then it could
really be throwing the baby out with the bathwater."
Regards,
Saiful
--
Saiful Amin
+91 9343826438