From: Dianne O'Leary
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2011 13:42:18 -0400
Subject: Rejected Springer reprint request
On September 9, I wrote to Springer asking for a pdf file of one of my
papers:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016614603137
Wang and O'Leary, Adaptive use of iterative methods in
predictor-corrector interior point methods for linear programming
Numerical Algorithms, 25 (2000) 387-406.
It took until October 8 for them to answer my request, and they
decided that I was not entitled to the pdf file of my own paper.
This doesn't seem to be the way to maintain the good will of the
community. They might have the legal right to make this decision, but
it seems to me that it is bad logic and bad business, since they rely
on us to provide, without financial compensation, the content for
their journals and the refereeing of other manuscripts.
My university does not subscribe to this journal -- too expensive --
so I was wondering if anyone had an idea of how I can obtain this pdf
file.
Thanks much.
Dianne O'Leary
In response to my posting of trouble getting a pdf file of one of my Springer-published papers, I received over 200 messages of support and advice. It is a great community! M.J.D. (Mike) Powell was inspired to contact Springer, and in response, I very promptly received the pdf file (which I have learned that Springer is willing to supply to every author) and legal permission to post it on my website (which Springer does not ordinarily give). This gives me exactly what I wanted, and I am grateful. I had sent my original request to Springer from the website of the article, clicking the "permissions and reprints" button at http://www.springerlink.com/ this gives the wrong outcome if you are the author. The people who processed my request did not forward it to the appropriate person, the editor, found using the "contact" button on the journal's homepage. A week after my posting, Claude Brezinski, editor-in-chief of Numerical Algorithms, wrote me saying that my message might be interpreted as criticism of him and the editorial board of the journal. I meant no such criticism. Elizabeth Loew of Springer has been very helpful in trying to solve the problems and clarify the issues. It is in the current Springer copyright agreement that authors cannot post the journal pdf files to their own websites. Authors are allowed to email the pdf to colleagues. As Steve Vavasis noted last week, authors who care about making their articles more available need to look into mechanisms such as the SPARC copyright addendum: http://www.arl.org/sparc/ See also the SHERPA/RoMEO site that provides the copyright policy for many journals: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo |