Whether we're fighting patent trolls in court; arguing in Congress for more balanced copyright laws; or urging governments, funders, and educational institutions to
adopt open access policies, EFF is committed to building a society that supports creativity and innovation, where established players in the marketplace for technology and culture aren't allowed to silence the next generation of creators.
Not exact matches
To overcome this problem, I believe that scientific journals should necessarily
adopt an entirely
open -
access policy.
Thus were established, after World War II, the NOAO and the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)-- also among the first National Science Foundation (NSF) entities to be federally funded — with the aim of giving all U.S. astronomers
access to top facilities.6 These observatories quickly
adopted a so - called
open skies
policy (OSP), which guaranteed any researcher, U.S. or international, equal and free
access to the federally funded NOAO / NRAO telescopes.
My take on this is that, on the one hand, governments and other official sources of law should provide wholesale
access (in today's terms, they should
adopt and implement
Open data
policies).
Courts have been tremendously supportive of
open access by
adopting the neutral citation, by using reproduction - friendly templates and by
adopting favourable dissemination
policies.
IDENTIFIER: http://sciencecommons.org/projects/publishing/oalaw/oalawjournals/ DESCRIPTION: The listed journals have
adopted Science Commons»
Open Access Law Journal Principles or have
policies consistent with them.