can someone explain to me why non-commercial creative commons licenses are not open when applied to scholarly articles?
I've heard this statment a lot but I'm not 100% on the underlying logic.
@vickysteeves I’m not sure but maybe because it could preclude use by people who need to photocopy them (for example) for an edu purpose when students don’t have high bandwidth so can’t access online, and a bookstore or something might make a small profit by doing so? I seem to recall hearing something about a situation like this awhile ago.
@clhendricksbc @vickysteeves The general case I’d make is that NC means it cannot be hosted where ads are displayed or printed where money is made – thus distribution via the usual channels is hampered. By itself, that seems to be nothing specific to academic articles but perhaps the expectation is that papers are usually distributed in ways that make money for somebody?
@vickysteeves @kensanata I do think the problem is and has always been the ambiguity which leads things to be less shareable than one would have thought because one may not imagine all the possible uses. Someone mentioned that one couldn’t upload charts or graphs to Wikipedia from such articles b/c that could count as making money.
Maybe nonprofit would be better? Still could be ambiguous though.