I’ve been working up to a rant on twitter lately about Open Access, as
the
Access2Research
petition’s first week drew to a close (sign it).
The usual suspects are making the usual arguments - OA will dictate
where scientists have to publish, OA will kill peer review, and most
offensively to me, science is too complex for us unwashed liberal arts
heathens to possibly understand, so no good will come of access.
But science is a place where we keep out the unwashed masses. We no
longer credential computer scientists (well, universities churn them
out, but your credentials on github matter a
lot more to savvy programmers than a CS degree from a state university -
you’d be better served majoring in something fun and checking in code to
open source projects).
Has innovation in computer science been a problem? [crickets
chirping]
Basically every knowledge based discipline that runs on digital content
has been transformed. Software. Journalism. Music. Video. And you can
track the innovation patterns of each one based on the level of control
that institutions maintain.
Note: not all innovation is useful - most of it is shit - so part of my
argument is that radically increasing the rate of *all* innovation is
the best mathematically certain way to increase the rate of *useful*
innovation. It’s like art. Most art sucks. But if enough people make
art, then even if the rate of awesome artists doesn’t improve,
making more people overall be artists means more awesome
art .
That’s what’s happened in software. More people make it. That means more
shit software. We just don’t use it (ever browse the Android app store’s
dregs? Sheesh). It’s happening in journalism, whose business model
turned out to be based on classified advertising and got eaten by
Craigslist, the ugliest website on earth. It’s happening in music, where
Apple ate the music industry’s lunch, where
artists can raise a million
dollars on Kickstarter just as their old labels go bankrupt.
But science isn’t like that. Science is a lot more like the cable
industry. Comcast and a few behemoths control the last mile of the
internet to most houses, and so we don’t even realize the world we live
in is radically limited. Internet in the US is so bad compared to so
much of the world and we don’t even see it. Toll access publishers of
science are just like Comcast. They want to control the last mile.
And scientists who buy into the argument that those of us in our houses,
lacking credentials to understand their science, are perpetuating a
knowledge lockup. They’re on the wrong side of history.
You see, it does not matter if 999 of the 1000 people who read an open
access article, who might not otherwise have been allowed to read it
without paying $50, fail to understand it, believe they have disproved
the second law of thermodynamics, etc. It matters that the one person
does read and understand is provided access.
Because then, in that moment, we’ve created a scientist - or at least
the makings of one. And the only people that threatens are those
counting on their credentials to keep them competitive, or profitable,
or employed. Since I’m none of those three it’s pretty easy to support
open access.