Today, Tuesday the 14th of October 2008, is Open Access Day. Like many others, this blog post is joining in by describing why Open Access matters – from a personal point of view. According to the wikipedia article Open Access (OA) is “free, immediate, permanent, full-text, online access, for any user, web-wide, to digital scientific and scholarly material, primarily research articles published in peer-reviewed journals. OA means that any individual user, anywhere, who has access to the Internet, may link, read, download, store, print-off, use, and data-mine the digital content of that article. An OA article usually has limited copyright and licensing restrictions.” What does all this mean and why does it matter? Well, in four question-and-answer points, here goes… (more…)
October 14, 2008
Open Access Day: Why It Matters
Filed under: web of science — Duncan Hull @ 12:16 am
Tags: Alfonso Valencia, André Brown, bbsrc, Ewan Birney, Mark Walport, Markus Herrgård, metabolic, Michael Ashburner, Neil Swainston, Open Access, Open Access Day, PLoS, PubMedCentral, sbml, systems biology, Wellcome Trust, yeast
Tags: Alfonso Valencia, André Brown, bbsrc, Ewan Birney, Mark Walport, Markus Herrgård, metabolic, Michael Ashburner, Neil Swainston, Open Access, Open Access Day, PLoS, PubMedCentral, sbml, systems biology, Wellcome Trust, yeast