Publishers Offer CHORUS as Solution to Federal Open Access Requirements

The Association of American Publishers (AAP) has put forward its bid for a coalition of publishers to handle many of the requirements outlined in the recent Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) memo requiring open access to federally funded research, in the form of the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the United States (CHORUS).
The Association of American Publishers (AAP) has put forward its bid for a coalition of publishers to handle many of the requirements outlined in the recent Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) memo requiring open access to federally funded research, in the form of the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the United States (CHORUS). The publishers are in discussions with OSTP, the funding agencies, universities and research library communities (as are other proposed solutions by other stakeholders, not yet announced). CHORUS plans to “work out the system architecture and technical specifications over the summer and have an initial proof of concept completed by August 30.” Publishers have offered to cover the costs for implementing CHORUS, but Joseph W. Serene, Treasurer/Publisher of the American Physical Society (APS), doesn’t think that will be a heavy burden. He told LJ, “most of the things that are on [the memo’s list of requirements], we can provide at very little marginal expense.” Metadata nonprofit CrossRef and its newly launched FundRef service, which ties published papers to the grants that fund them, would provide the infrastructure or “back-end”, Ed Pentz, Executive Director of CrossRef, told LJ. Given that the publishers were already planning to include FundRef information and participating in dark archives such as CLOCKSS, LOCKSS, and PORTICO, “making a version of the paper available to the public, that’s almost a software triviality,” Serene said. Similarly, building an integrated interface and APIs are tasks publishers have much experience with.

Why CHORUS?

CHORUS is billed as a substantial savings of time and trouble for agencies, since it would build on publishers’ existing infrastructure. (A major concern of publishers, since as Serene told LJ, “Money they spend on this they’re not going to be spending on funding research. The APS is very concerned about the money available to fund research; even our commercial partners are concerned because that is ultimately what funds their business.”) Other advantages to publishers include minimizing their compliance costs and allowing them to track data about article usage. Serene also pointed to preventing variant versions, tracking errata, and drawing readers’ eyes to the publishers’ platforms, where they may decide to take advantage of other resources, as motivations for APS’s participation. As outlined, CHORUS does not yet address the data or text mining portions of the memo. On data, Serene said “that’s not what CHORUS is about, CHORUS is about the publication side, though we’re certainly open to the intersection of that as it becomes clearer.” Pentz told LJ that FundRef “is just for publications, but the same principle can apply to data sets. There’s definitely plans to replicate this for data as well.” Text mining, however, Serene did view as within CHORUS’ purview and, indeed, mission:  “That’s part of what’s going on with the project: to try and do this in an effective and properly controlled way,” he said. However, others in the scholarly community have raised more sinister ideas as possible motivations. “Given that the AAP clearly thinks that public access policies are bad for their businesses, they would have a strong incentive to make their implementation of a public access policy as difficult to use and as functionless as possible in order to drive down usage and make the policies appear to be a failure,” PLOS co-founder Michael Eisen wrote. The pseudonymous Library Loon speculated that the publishers are looking ahead to a less-OA-friendly moment to roll back the OSTP’s decision, while in the meantime minimizing its impact. “Infrastructure that publishers control is vastly easier to re-enclose,” the blogger said. “Re-enclosure of formerly open-access journals is a known, already-seen strategy... A slyer and less-easily-fought tactic, however, is what Eschenfelder and Benton call ‘soft technological protection measures.’ ‘Soft TPM’ in their parlance means deliberately heightening user annoyance, such penny-ante irritants as disabling printing and downloading, using lousy search algorithms, turning away web search engines, and so on. The aim, of course, is making the open-access materials a poorer substitute for what libraries buy.”

What would CHORUS mean for libraries?

The short answer is, no one knows yet what CHORUS would mean for libraries if adopted. Rebecca Kennison, director of Columbia University’s Center for Digital Research and Scholarship, told LJ: “In reply to the comments on the Scholarly Kitchen posting by Kent Anderson, Thane Kerner of Silverchair says that 'several university and library organizations' have been consulted by the CHORUS Steering Committee. Those organizations are not listed, so it is hard to know who were included in those initial discussions and what role they played. I think the comments in response to that posting concerning libraries raise interesting questions that remain (at least as of this [Wednesday] evening) unanswered by the CHORUS Steering Committee. It remains unclear what role, if any, CHORUS would see libraries playing in the solution they are proposing.” Kennison also raised concerns that “CHORUS addresses well the publisher piece of the infrastructure, but ignores almost entirely the rest of the research ecosystem. A solution that takes into account the entire research life cycle would optimally provide possibilities for collective stakeholder collaborations that would include librarians, who understand well the needs and demands of controlled vocabularies, authority records, complex reporting systems, and so on, as well as Offices of Research (including sponsored projects administrators and compliance officers), PIs, departmental assistants, and others actively engaged daily in the research process.” In addition to their traditional role, Kennison points out that libraries are increasingly publishers as well, and that their publications may not be a good fit for the CHORUS model. “The CHORUS workflow assumes all publishers operate like large publishers do, in particular that they all use online journal content management systems that generate structured XML that could be fed into FundRef, that they all produce full-text XML that could be deposited into Portico/LOCKSS, and that they are all members of CrossRef. Many societies that publish independently and many library-based publishing operations (a rapidly growing group) may not operate in this way and may not be able to do so…It seems less clear how such groups might participate in the proposed clearinghouse solution outside of the workflow outlined by CHORUS.”
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Stevan Harnad

Revealing Dialogue on "CHORUS" with David Wojick, OSTI Consultant http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/1027-.html

Posted : Jul 28, 2013 05:07


Bonnie Klein

The private sector has been hard at work to not just mitigate the public access mandate on current business models, but to strengthen their hold and control of public-funded STI for the long-term. CHORUS is a narrow interpretation and implementation of the White House directive. In essence, every view and every use is with publisher permission, whether needed it or not. It also erodes fair use by setting up a standard for a community of practice. As structured, the Government agency just points to publishers who create and therefore “own” the metadata, abstract, and full-text published versions of government-funded research articles.

Posted : Jun 09, 2013 04:55


Stevan Harnad

CHORUS: YET ANOTHER TROJAN HORSE FROM THE PUBLISHING LOBBY The OSTP should on no account be taken in by the Trojan Horse that is being offered by the research publishing industry's "CHORUS" CHORUS is just the latest successor organisation for self-serving anti-Open Access (OA) lobbying by the publishing industry. Previous incarnations have been the "PRISM coalition" and the "Research Works Act" (see Google and Wikipedia to learn their shameful history). 1. It is by now evident to everyone that OA is inevitable, because it is optimal for research, researchers, research institutions, the vast research and development industry, students, teachers, journalists and the tax-paying public that funds the research. 2. Research is funded by the public and conducted by researchers and their institutions for the sake of research progress, productivity and applications -- not in order to guarantee publishers' current revenue streams and modus operandi: Research publishing is a service industry and must adapt to the revolutionary new potential that the online era has opened up for research. 3. That is why both research funders (like NIH) and research institutions (like Harvard) -- in the US as well as in the rest of the world -- are increasingly mandating (requiring) OA: See ROARMAP. 4. Publishers are already trying to delay the potential benefits of OA to research progress by imposing embargoes of 6-12 months or more on research access that can and should be immediate in the online era. 5. The strategy of CHORUS is to try to take the power to provide OA out of the hands of researchers so that publishers gain control over both the timetable and the insfrastructure for providing OA. 6. Moreover, the publisher lobby is attempting to do this under the pretext of saving "precious research funds" for research! 7. It is for researchers to provide OA, and for their funders and institutions to mandate and monitor OA provision by requiring deposit in their institutional repositories -- which already exist, for multiple purposes. 8. Depositing in repositories entails no extra research expense for research, just a few extra keystrokes, from researchers. 9. Institutional and subject repositories keep both the timetable and the insfrastructure for providing OA where it belongs: in the hands of the research community, in whose interests it is to provide OA. 10. The publishing industry's previous ploys -- PRISM and the Research Works Act -- were obviously self-serving Trojan Horses, promoting the publishing industry's interests disguised as the interests of research. Let the OSTP not be taken in this time either. http://www.prismcoalition.org Giles, J. (2007) PR's 'pit bull' takes on open access. Nature 5 January 2007.

Posted : Jun 07, 2013 07:11


Jenny R

So... on the one hand publishers are OK with using their resources for this because it's so easy and cheap. And on the other hand they say the government should get out of this business because it's too difficult and costly. Um. The Loon is right. This is a strategy for future re-closing.

Posted : Jun 07, 2013 12:23


Carol Anne Meyer

Just a clarification to Rebecca Kennisons point" "The CHORUS workflow assumes all publishers operate like large publishers do, in particular that they all use online journal content management systems that generate structured XML that could be fed into FundRef, ..., and that they are all members of CrossRef. Many societies that publish independently and many library-based publishing operations (a rapidly growing group) may not operate in this way and may not be able to do so…It seems less clear how such groups might participate in the proposed clearinghouse solution outside of the workflow outlined by CHORUS.” CrossRef represents 4300 publishers throughout the world, not just large publishers. More than 2/3 of CrossRef members are not-for-profits, and we are adding hundreds of new members a year who do deposit XML metadata to CrossRef through various tools that we are working to improve. Incidentally most of our new members are Open Access publishers, and many of them only publish one or a few journals. Our membership agreement requires participants to put archiving agreements in place with organizations like CLOCKKS, LOCKKS, Portico, eDepot or the British Library.

Posted : Jun 06, 2013 11:27


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