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Publishing and copyright licences: academics opt to keep control

<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="standfirst">Academics prefer to publish their research under the most restrictive forms of copyright, a survey has suggested
April 4, 2013

More than half of 13,000 authors who have recently published in Taylor &amp; Francis journals singled out the permissive CC-BY licence as their least favourite under which to publish their research.

This licence is often used in open-access publishing and allows authors¡¯ work to be used in multiple ways as long as credit is given.

Under its open-access policy, this is also the licence that Research Councils UK requires for the research it funds, when work is made open access via the ¡°gold¡± journal-based route.

Meanwhile, the option of ¡°exclusive licence to publish¡±, under which the author allows the journal to publish but retains copyright, was the most popular method among academics.

The CC BY-NC-ND licence, the most restrictive of Creative Commons licences available, was the next most popular in the survey, which was carried out at the end of 2012 and in early 2013.

elizabeth.gibney@tsleducation.com

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