Trump administration floats proposed executive order
As that battle carries on, the Trump administration has floated a proposed executive order that all federally funded research be made immediately available to the public upon publication — directly challenging paywalls by some publishers that restrict such access, for up to a year, to those who pay. Schekman and 20 other Nobel laureates signed a letter to Trump in support of it. “The old model of subscription publication is not a good fit for the modern electronic era,” they wrote.
The White House proposal has further alarmed publishers, particularly those run by scientific societies, which rely on revenues from subscribers to validate the science through peer review and distribute their findings.
Fred Hutch transplant physician Dr. Stephanie Lee, who holds the David and Patricia Giuliani/Oliver Press Endowed Chair in Cancer Research and is president of the American Society of Hematology, responded for the society in a letter to President Trump. She wrote that the proposal could significantly harm “scientific rigor, discovery and innovation” by threatening the resources needed to staff a high-quality peer review, curation and dissemination system. (At this time, Fred Hutch has not taken a position on the proposed executive order.)
The push for open access, however, has strong support from powerful players. bioRxiv has received funding from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, a limited liability company founded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Dr. Pricilla Chan. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation since 2017 requires all peer-reviewed research funded by the organization to be immediately and freely available through open access publication. eLife was launched with support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Max Planck Society and the Wellcome Trust.
Stakeholders in the debate over open science have set aside some their differences in response to the coronavirus crisis. Nearly 100 publishers, research foundations and drug makers have pledged to provide open access to new research regarding the disease and share laboratory findings with the World Health Organization, “at least for the duration of the outbreak.”
Top-tier medical journals have been establishing open-access, peer-reviewed sister publications, such as the American Medical Association’s JAMA Network Open, launched in 2018. Researchers pay a fee to post peer-reviewed articles on the online site, in a process designed to be quicker than other JAMA journals'.
Dr. Frederick Rivara, a professor of pediatrics at Seattle Children’s, is editor-in-chief. “I think we in the health sciences have been a little late in adopting open science,” he said. “The principle is that, by design, research conducted openly and transparently leads to better science, and it is what we are all trying to do.”