Screening of Documentary Film: Paywall
Join the Libraries鈥 Scholarly Communication Community of Practice in a screening of the documentary, "Paywall: The Business of Scholarship," on Thurs. Feb. 21 from 2-3:30 p.m. in Alden Library (319). The film, which promotes open access publishing, critiques the greed behind the publishing industry.
According to , some of the questions raised by the film are: 鈥淗ow is it possible that big for-profit publishers, such as Elsevier, have bigger profit margins than some of the biggest corporations in the world like top tech companies Apple, Facebook and Google?鈥 and 鈥淲hy can鈥檛 everyone read all publicly funded research?鈥
The 65-minute film, featuring dozens of interviews, has one message: the system for disseminating research is broken and needs fixing. Some of the people in the film include John Adler, professor of neurosurgery at Stanford University; Richard Price, founder and CEO of the academic social networking site: academia.edu; and Tom Callaway, university outreach leader for the open-source software company, Red Hat. The main criticism of the film is that it is considered one-sided because only a few representatives from the publishing industry are featured.
The film director Jason Schmitt, an associate professor of communication and media at Clarkson University, sets an example by making the film openly licensed and free to watch, which also allows for sharing, or adaptation, as long as credit is given to its creators.
One of Schmitt鈥檚 notable quotes from the film is: 鈥淭he publishing industry has been able to thrive because it has taken advantage of the people who provide its core product鈥攔esearchers.鈥
Watch the teaser below:
from on .