Video of the 2024 SSP debate: “The open access movement has failed”
October 18, 2025
Readers with good memories will remember that back in May last year I announced I would be one of the two participants in the plenary debate that closes the annual meeting of the Society for Scholarly Publishing. I was cast against type, proposing the motion “The open access movement has failed”, with preprint advocate Jessica Polka providing the honorable opposition.
I posted the full text of my opening argument and of Jessica’s argument in opposition — but not of the shorter rebuttals that each of us gave, or of course the unscripted Q&A that followed the formal part of the debate.
Now, only a year and a bit late, comes the video of the debate! My apologies for the delay: it wasn’t available straight after the meeting, and then I forgot to check back a month later.
I’d like to embed the video in this page, but WordPress won’t let me (not unreasonably — I wouldn’t let people embed arbitrary JavaScript in my site, either). So you’ll have to link through to the SSP’s page with the video.
It’s the only way to find out who won the debate, after all!
Get your name into the permanent scientific record!
September 27, 2025
Just a quick update on the crowd-funding effort to publish the new diplodocoid volume as open-access papers at Palaeontologia Electronica.

Van der Linden et al. 2024:Figure 6. Cervical vertebra 13 of Ardetosaurus viator MAB011899. CV13 is shown in A) ventral, B) dorsal, C) left lateral, D) right lateral, E) posterior, and F) anterior view. A close up of the white box in F is provided of the accessory laminae in the SPRF, shown in anterodorsal view. White shaded areas indicate reconstructed parts. The left cervical rib loop was obscured in ventral view for support and therefore roughly outlined here. White dotted lines in A indicate the remnants of the ventral keel. 1 indicates the triangular projections on the diapophysis. Abbreviations: al, accessory lamina; CPRL, centroprezygapophyseal lamina; epi, epipophysis; pap, parapophysis; PCDL, posterior centrodiapophyseal lamina; pre, pre-epipophysis; PRSL, prespinal lamina; pvf, posteroventral flange; SPOL, spinopostzygapophyseal lamina; SPRL, spinoprezygapophyseal lamina; TPOL, interpostzygapophyseal lamina.
The drive now contains an offer that maybe it should have included from the start: “We promise to mention the names of the backers in the acknowledgements of at least one upcoming paper, if this campaign is successful.”
I don’t know how big an incentive this will feel to different people. But I remember the thrill the first time my own name appeared in the scientific record, in the acknowledgements of the “Angloposeidon” paper (Naish et al. 2004), and I hope it will do the same for some of you.
So if you’d like to contribute, and become the envy of your friends and family by appearing in the scientific record as a sponsor of sauropod palaeontology, get yourself over to the crowdfunding page!
References
- Naish, Darren, David M. Martill, David Cooper and Kent A. Stevens. 2004. Europe’s largest dinosaur? A giant brachiosaurid cervical vertebra from the Wessex Formation (Early Cretaceous) of southern England. Cretaceous Research 25:787-795.
- Van der Linden, Tom T. P., Emanuel Tschopp, Roland B. Sookias, Jonathan J. W. Wallaard, Femke M. Holwerda and Anne S. Schulp. 2024. A new diplodocine sauropod from the Morrison Formation, Wyoming, USA [Ardetosaurus viator]. Palaeontologia Electronica 27.3.a50. doi:10.26879/1380
Anyone who’s been reading this blog for a while knows that Matt and I are both all in on open access. What is the point of “publishing” something that not everyone can read? We always want our work to be available to the widest possible audience, so it’s a no-brainer that we won’t let it moulder behind a paywall.
But the process of scholarly publication does cost money. Nowhere near as much as commercial publishers charge, sure, but there is an irreducible cost which has to be paid somehow.
And now, here comes Diplodocoidea (Dinosauria, Sauropoda): Systematics, Phylogeny, Biogeography!
This is the snappy title of a “virtual edited volume” on Diplodocoids, which is being published a chapter at a time at the venerable open-access journal Palaeontologia Electronica (PE for short). Each chapter comes out as soon as it’s ready, and you’ve probably already seen the first two:
- A new diplodocine sauropod from the Morrison Formation, Wyoming, USA (Ardetosaurus viator)
- Introduction to Diplodocoidea (I was an author on this one: see the introduction to the introduction.)
Two more chapters have already been accepted and are in press; and a fifth is in review. There are plenty more in preparation, including at least one more new diplodocoid. A link to each paper will appear in the Table of Contents page, so that page will always be an index to all the available content.
To cover their costs for this volume, PE needs $3000. That comes out crazy cheap — we’re looking at a double-digit number of papers, so the cost to make each one freely available to the whole world in perpetuity is less than $300.
To raise this money, the group has kicked off a crowdfunding effort. It has a little under a month to raise the necessary $3000, and as I write this it’s 20% of the way to that goal. If you can afford to chip in, please do get yourself over there and make a contribution. You’ll have the satisfaction of knowing that you helped increase the world’s access to knowledge of diplodocoids.
This seems to have gone under the radar: Accelerating Access to Research Results: New Implementation Date for the 2024 NIH Public Access Policy. It’s a memo from Jay Bhattacharya, director of the NIH (the United States’ National Institutes of Health):
The 2024 Public Access Policy, originally slated to go into effect on December 31, 2025, will now be effective as of July 1, 2025. […] While the 2008 Policy allowed for an up to 12-month delay before such articles were required to be made publicly available, in 2024, NIH revised the Public Access Policy to remove the embargo period so that researchers, students, and members of the public have rapid access to these findings.
Well, this is tremendous news. The NIH is the biggest single funder of health research in the USA, and making all the work that it funds immediately open access is a huge win. We could complain and say that this should have happened years ago — there has never been the slightest justification for Green OA embargoes — but instead let’s just rejoice that it’s happening now.
(Why now, I wonder, rather than the originally scheduled date six months later? Maybe they’re desperately trying to get it done before they’re abolished or defunded, or Bhattacharya is replaced by a “pro-business” Trump lackey. I mean, this one piece of very good news about the NIH could easily be blown away by forthcoming much worse news. But that’s for another day.)
More on PalArch: it’s dead
August 12, 2024
Last time we talked about the evident hijacking of the PalArch Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. No-one seemed to know what had happened or how. I managed to track down Andre J. Veldmeijer, who was involved with the PalArch journals a while back. Based on my Facebook Messenger discussions with him, here’s what we now know:
Andre is not involved any more with these journals. He advises to stay away from the journals. The old publications that were published when the journal was still managed by the PalArch Foundation can apparently be found elsewhere on the web (though I don’t know where).
So how did we get here? It seems another publisher took them over, probably by a legitimate buy-out, with the idea to expand their fields of publishing. At that time, the PalArch Foundation saw no signs they were predatory. But now they’re making their money with bad papers that appear to be peer-reviewed but which are not in any meaningful sense.
Apparently the hijacking was announced several times on various websites and email lists, but somehow I missed them all and I think most of us did.
Anyway, this is an ignominious end to a journal that I liked and that was one of only a few in the important Diamond OA niche. Rest In Peace, PalArch.
In opposition to my speech supporting the motion “the open access movement has failed”, here’s what Jessica Polka said in opposition to the motion.
The open access movement has not failed. It is in the process of succeeding.
Indeed, over 50% of papers are now open access. And this proportion is set to increase, for three reasons:
- Top-down leadership
- (Overdue) attention to cost and equity
- New filters
First, top-down leadership.
Richard Poynder argues that the movement has failed because “ownership” of the movement has been handed to universities and funders. To quote him:
OA was conceived as something that researchers would opt into. The assumption was that once the benefits of open access were explained to them, researchers would voluntarily embrace it – primarily by self-archiving their research in institutional or preprint repositories. But while many researchers were willing to sign petitions in support of open access, few (outside disciplines like physics) proved willing to practice it voluntarily.
Fundamentally, I agree. Individual scholars are still too hamstrung by their incentives to act alone, without the strength of collective action. Free thinking and individualism are prized in academia, with investigators evaluated based on how unique and iconoclastic their individual contributions are. And, in this competitive environment, sticking your head above the sand to question the rules of the game – the rules by which everyone who is evaluating you has succeeded – is not a recipe for success.
This is why I am grateful that funders, governments, and coalitions are finally stepping in at scale to change the rules. I believe it is the only pragmatic solution to this wicked problem. I’ll share some examples.
When discussing coordinated support for open access, we have to begin where the movement began: Latin America, which has been leading the way in coordinated support. For a quarter of a century, the publicly funded bibliographic database SciELO, based in Brazil, has been providing free access to scholarly journals. There are now over 1.2 million articles from over 1,600 journals in collections representing 16 different countries in south and central america and Africa.
And in 2018, a coalition called AmeliCA, which stands for OPen Knowledge in Latin America and the Global South, launched to strengthen partnerships between academic institutions and publishing infrastructure. 400+ journals, nearly 3,000 books, and 100 institutional repositories have joined.
But even outside of Latin America, in the last few years, we have seen prominent funders establish public access policies.
Europe has been making serious inroads since the establishment of the open access provisions of Horizon 2020. And when cOAlition S formed in 2018, it represented an unprecedented commitment to coordinate among governments and philanthropic organizations in support of open access.
In 2021, UNESCO released a recommendation on open science, elevating the cause to an international stage, and providing a strong moral imperative for individual governments to take action.
And in 2022, the United States White House Office of Science and Technology Policy released the Nelson memo, which ensured zero-embargo public access to federally-funded literature. When this takes effect at the end of 2025, we are going to see even greater strides towards open access and open data.
Second, we are seeing some movement on cost and equity. That’s long overdue, but at least it’s happening.
The declaration of the 2002 Budapest Open Access Initiative suggested that open access publishing would lower costs, and promote equity by “shar[ing] the learning of the rich with the poor and the poor with the rich.”
In fact, the concept of an article processing charge wasn’t even mentioned in the principles. Instead, the authors wrote:
Because price is a barrier to access, these new journals will not charge subscription or access fees, and will turn to other methods for covering their expenses. There are many alternative sources of funds for this purpose, including the foundations and governments that fund research, the universities and laboratories that employ researchers, endowments set up by discipline or institution, friends of the cause of open access, profits from the sale of add-ons to the basic texts, funds freed up by the demise or cancellation of journals charging traditional subscription or access fees, or even contributions from the researchers themselves. There is no need to favor one of these solutions over the others for all disciplines or nations, and no need to stop looking for other, creative alternatives.
Unfortunately, the creative alternative (that is to say, the article processing charge) created by the publishing industry is coming at a high cost. APCs increased 50 percent from 2010 to 2019. And with individual APCs reaching in to the six figures, it’s no surprise that in 2022, OSTP estimated that American taxpayers are already paying $390 to $798 million annually to publish federally funded research.
That’s why it’s so damaging that many recent policies, like the Nelson memo and plan S, don’t go far enough to reduce economic exploitation. Instead, the Nelson memo directs federal agencies to, quote, “allow researchers to include reasonable publication costs […] as allowable expenses in all research budgets,” which implies support for article processing charges. This model creates major challenges for researchers WITHOUT federal or other funds, to say nothing of those in low and middle income countries, or in fields where resources are less plentiful.
But, there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
In May 2023, the European Union’s council of ministers called for a “no pay” model, in which costs for disseminating and evaluating research are paid directly by institutions and funders. This can be achieved in several ways, including with “diamond” open access journals. CoAlition S’s responsible publishing proposal is another acknowledgement of the need for fundamental change. And the new Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation policy, which prevents the payment of APCs from grant funds, is a strong signal that the system is being questioned.
And the third reason open access will succeed: new filters.
Richard Poynder questions the very benefits of having information publicly accessible, given current developments around mis- and disinformation. He argues for having a “membrane between scientific research and the chaotic mess of false and arbitrary information that swirls around the web.”
Yes, preprints, the financial incentives around open access, and other forms of open publishing do tip the balance away from gatekeeping and toward inclusion. This means that the rate of spurious knowledge available is going to increase.
However, it also lulls us out of a false sense of security in a system that NEVER was equipped to form a fool-proof defense against misinformation. For proof of that, you can look back to the Wakefield paper, or to the current papermill crisis.
Instead, we need a better immune system for misinformation. To me, this looks like moving away from a model in which 2-3 invited peers, who cannot possibly be experts in everything covered in a highly interdisciplinary paper with 30 co-authors, are rushed to give their evaluation at a time when they are not at liberty to discuss the paper with their colleagues. Then, all the information about whether a paper is rigorous or interesting (and to whom) gets compressed down into a single value – the title of the journal in which it is published.
Luckily, many journals are conducting transparent review, in which the reports are published. But, In order to create a system that is powerful enough to identify and correct problems in the literature, we need to disseminate research to large audiences BEFORE putting a stamp of approval on it. We need to disentangle the functions of traditional journals into a “publish, review, curate” model in which preprints and other means of sharing research are the first step, and the entire community can then discuss the work together.
And beyond that, we need to continue to experiment with new ways of organizing knowledge altogether – and this is what we are seeking to support at Astera.
For example, there are many exciting experiments in publishing: integrating code with narratives (like the Notebooks Now initiative from AGU), micropublications (which are single figure papers), publishing individual modules that can be linked together (for example, Octopus.ac), creating machine-readable nanopublications (which break knowledge down into triples: a subject, predicate, and object), discourse graphs (that create knowledge graphs out of evidence and ideas), and many others.
These threads are going to come together to create a future in which knowledge is shared and interpreted in completely new ways. The success of the open access movement is going to both lay the foundation for, and maximize the benefits of, this technological transformation.
The SSP debate on “the open access movement has failed” — part 1: speech for the motion
June 5, 2024
As I noted a week ago, to my enormous surprise I was invited to be one of the two participants in the plenary debate the closes the annual meeting of my long-term nemesis, the Society for Scholarly Publishing. I was to propose the motion “The open access movement has failed” in ten minutes or less, followed by Jessica Polka’s statement against the motion; then each of us would make three-minute responses to the other before the debate was opened to the floor. What follows is the opening statement that I gave.
The motion before us is that the Open Access Movement has failed. To demonstrate the truth of this proposition, I have to identify what the “open access movement” actually is. And one of the problems that Rick Poynder pointed out in his Scholarly Kitchen interview is that there has never really been a single organization that represents “The Open Access Movement” in the way that the Open Source Initiative represents its movement. So we’re going to look at four initiatives going back 30 years.
We’ll skip over the World Wide Web itself, which was originally announced by Tim Berners-Lee in 1991 with the words:
The project started with the philosophy that much academic information should be freely available to anyone.
The first Open Access Movement we’ll consider was Stevan Harnad’s “Subversive Proposal” of 1994, calling on scholarly authors to self-archive their manuscripts in open repositories. This proposal led to the publication of a book, the development of the EPrints repository software and the creation of the CogPrints repository for cognitive sciences. But can it be said to have succeeded? To quote from the proposal: “If every scholarly author in the world […] established a globally accessible archive for every piece of esoteric writing he did […], the long-heralded transition from paper publication to purely electronic publication would follow suit almost immediately.”
Measured against this vision of a sweeping global change, This open access movement surely failed.
Now we consider a second open access movement: in 1999, Harold Varmus, director of the National Institutes of Health, published a proposal called E-BIOMED. I quote:
We envision a system for electronic publication in which existing journals, newly created journals, and an essentially unrestricted collection of scientific reports can be accessed and searched with great ease and without cost by anyone connected to the Internet.
Now, Harnad’s Subversive Proposal had failed due to insufficient grass-roots momentum. But the same fate could surely not befall E-BIOMED, which was backed by the might of the USA’s biggest civilian research agency.
But there was opposition. In a welcoming editorial about E-BIOMED, The Lancet noted “Much of the biomedical publishing community is scrambling to defend itself against what it sees as an unprecedented act of aggression.”
Looking back sadly ten years later, Varmus wrote: “The most shrill opposition came, disappointingly, from the staffs of many respected scientific and medical societies […] The for-profit publishing houses were also unhappy, and sent their lead lobbyist, the former congresswoman Pat Schroeder, to Capitol Hill to talk to members of my appropriations subcommittees.” — in other words, to get the NIH defunded in retribution.
And the societies and publishers got their way. E-BIOMED was dead on arrival. Twenty-five years on, it’s so thoroughly forgotten that it’s hard to find on the Internet. It doesn’t have a Wikipedia entry, and isn’t even mentioned in the entry for Harold Varmus.
So the E-BIOMED open access movement failed utterly.
A third open access initiative arrived in 2002: a conference that united 16 open access advocates with different perspectives and gave rise to the Budapest Open Access Initiative. Its foundational document finished with this plea:
We invite governments, universities, libraries, journal editors, publishers, foundations, learned societies, professional associations, and individual scholars who share our vision to join us in the task of removing the barriers to open access.
Publisher opposition was significant. This very society [the Society for Scholarly Publishing], hired the consultant Eric Dezenhall to discuss public relations strategies for discrediting open access — for example, equating subscription-based publishing with peer review, and messaging such as “Public access equals government censorship”.
The Budapest Initiative would have needed a tidal wave of support to achieve escape velocity. In the face of this opposition and institutional inertia, it only raised ripples.
So the Budapest open access movement failed.
And there are more. I could talk about
- The Public Library of Science (launched in 2003), and its progressive stagnation; or
- The Cost of Knowledge petition (2012) that started brightly but ultimately achieved only free access to a handful of journals.
But our time is limited, so let’s jump ahead to our fourth open access movement.
Coalition S launched in 2018: a group of 11 national research funding organizations, quickly joined by the World Health Organization and hefty private funders like the Gates Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The tagline on their website summarizes the goal: “Making full and immediate Open Access a reality”. Surely if anyone could create a successful open access movement, it would be this powerful and wealthy group?
Coalition S started by launching what they called Plan S, which required open access for grant-funded articles. It used a wrinkle in this requirement as leverage to transition subscription journals to open access. I quote from the document Guidance on the Implementation of Plan S:
Authors publish Open Access with a CC BY license in a subscription journal that is covered by a transformative agreement which has a clear and time-specified commitment to a full Open Access transition.
[…]
In 2023, Coalition S will initiate a formal review process that examines […] the effect of transformative agreements.
Well.
In June 2023, Coalition S published its analysis of journals that had signed up to the Transformative Journals programme. It showed that only 1% of the journals in the program had flipped to full open access. More encouragingly, 30% of journals were meeting their open-access growth targets. But 68% had failed to meet the targets they had signed up to. A quarter of the enrolled journals had an open access rate of 10% or less.
The report says:
The fact that so many titles were unable to meet their [open access] growth targets suggests that for some publishers, the transition to full and immediate open access is unlikely to happen in a reasonable timeframe.
Later that year, Coalition S published a review titled Five years of Plan S: a journey towards full and immediate Open Access. Even the title feels like an admission of defeat: can you really have a journey towards something immediate? The report affirms what the analysis had suggested. I quote:
Based on progress reports and the very low Open Access transformation rate of Transformative Journals, Coalition S decided to end its financial support for Transformative Arrangements.
So Plan S’s goal of transforming subscription journals to open access failed.
In fact, all these open access movements have failed.
So where do we stand now? Going right back to the start, Harnad’s Subversive Proposal said:
Paper publishers will then either restructure themselves (with the cooperation of the scholarly community) […] or they will have to watch as peer community spawns a brand new generation of electronic-only publishers.
That’s still true, and represents the only real threat open access has ever presented to publishers.
I quoted earlier the report in which Coalition S “decided to end its financial support for Transformative Arrangements.” But the report goes on to say this:
Instead, [Coalition S] will direct its efforts to more innovative and community-driven Open Access publishing initiatives. [It] acknowledges the growing need for alternative, not-for profit publishing models, and is actively involved in European and global efforts for Diamond open access.
Plan S has failed; but Coalition S is pivoting. The world’s richest research funders are getting together to build their own open access platforms. That should be cause for publishers to carefully consider whether, in their quest for short-term gains, they have painted themselves into a corner.
We’ve looked at four open access movements and touched on several more. Every one of them has failed. And they have failed, mostly, because of opposition, obstruction and short-term opportunism on the part of publishers who have exchanged their original mission for shareholder value optimization.
But each wave has washed further up the beach.
There are three questions for this group:
- How many more open access movements will fail before one succeeds?
- When it does, will it succeed with the help of publishers, or despite them? And most crucially:
- Will it succeed with publishers or without them?
But until that day comes, we can confidently say that the open access movement has failed.
On the tragic fate of PeerJ
March 17, 2024
I said last time that Jisc’s feeble transition-to-open-access report was the first of two disapointing scholarly-communication announcements that week. The second was of course the announcement that PeerJ has been acquired by Taylor and Francis.
Matt and I have both been big fans of PeerJ since before it launched, and we were delighted to have our 2013 neck-anatomy paper in the first batch of articles published there. We’ve had a lot of good things to say about its open peer-review, its usefulness in teaching, its disruptiveness, about how it became our default choice of venue, and much more.
So it’s tragic to see it being eaten by one of the legacy publishers.
What’s even more tragic is to see the founders, who I have liked and respected for more than a decade, spouting such transparent b.s. in the press release:
“Becoming part of Taylor & Francis is an important step in PeerJ’s evolution,” explained Peter Binfield, PeerJ Co-Founder and Publisher. “This move will allow us to cement our original commitments to open research, equitable and inclusive publishing and rigorous peer review.”
Jason Hoyt, PeerJ Co-Founder and CEO added: “Our mission to make scientific research accessible to all whilst delivering 21st century technology aligns perfectly with Taylor & Francis’ vision.”
None of this is true. We know it’s not true. Pete and Jason know it’s not true. We know they know it’s not true. They know that we know they know. Why even insult us with this nonsense?
I suppose it’s part of the contract they signed with their new bosses, that they have to make public statements about how excited they are. But, seriously, who is buying this?
Here are two good things about the situation, though:
First, because everything published by PeerJ has been under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC By) licence, all the papers are still and will always remain free to read, redistribute, modify, etc. That’s the wonder of a licence. It’s not dependent on anyone’s good will. There’s nothing Taylor & Francis can do to change this. Even if they were to change PeerJ to use a different and more restrictive licence for new papers (and there’s no reason to think they would), nothing can change the legal status of what’s already been published.
And second, an email sent to PeerJ members promises that the publish-forever deals that we bought back in 2013 are still good:
You may have already seen the recent announcement that PeerJ has been acquired by Taylor & Francis, and I wanted to provide you with some reassurance regarding the status of your PeerJ Lifetime Membership: despite this change, your Lifetime Membership with PeerJ remains valid.
Your commitment to PeerJ and support for our mission are greatly appreciated and valued by PeerJ. If you have any questions or concerns about your lifetime membership or the acquisition in general, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us directly (communities@peerj.com). Your peace of mind is important to us, and we are here to address any inquiries you may have. You can read more in the announcement here.
I wonder how long Taylor and Francis will continue to honour this promise, though. Forever, as initially promised? Ten years? Five? We’ll see what happens when integrity runs up against profit margins.
I’ll have more to say about this acquisition, and about what it tells us about the scholarly publishing landscape more generally, but I’ll leave it there for now. Bottom line for me: this is a very sad day.
The untold story of the Carnegie Diplodocus
September 14, 2023
My talk (Taylor et al. 2023) from this year’s SVPCA is up!
The talks were not recorded live. But while it was fresh in my mind, I did a screencast of my own, and posted it on YouTube (CC By).
For the conference, I spoke very quickly and omitted some details to squeeze it into a 15-minute slot. In this version, I go a bit slower and make some effort to ensure it’s intelligible to an intelligent layman. That’s why it runs 21 minutes. I hope you’ll find it worth your time.
References
- Taylor, Michael P., Matthew C. Lamanna, Ilja Nieuwland, Amy C. Henrici, Linsly J. Church, Steven D. Sroka and Kenneth Carpenter. 2023. The untold story of the Carnegie Diplodocus. p. 31 in Anonymous (ed.), SVPCA 2023 Lincoln: the 69th Annual Symposium of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMGIacxCaaQ



