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by eesmith 2311 days ago
I could only read the abstract as the article is behind a paywall. But I don't think your response is based on reading the article?

The argument in the abstract is that current scientific practices "breach the principle of fairness and damage public interest". That is not making a "just because" argument.

Do open source licensing agreements likewise breach the principle of fairness and damage public interest? I don't think so. So it doesn't really fit the argument, does it?

Breaking the law is sometimes the moral thing to do. There can be consequences to opposing an immoral law, but one should not obey an immoral law "just because they feel strongly about being able to."

Shifting to the question of paywalls. What about when there is NO copyright to "usurp"?

Plenty of articles are out of copyright, or authored by an employee of the US government - making the text in the public domain.

In those cases where there are no IP rights to usurp, is it ethical to breach the paywalls of monetized academic publishing?