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by Vinnl 1919 days ago
Also depends on your jurisdiction. In the Netherlands, researchers are allowed to make their own works available to anyone six months after publication, regardless of their publisher's terms: https://www.openaccess.nl/en/in-the-netherlands/you-share-we...

Of course, it's not perfect since it still requires work on the part of the author, but all they have to do is give it to a university library and they'll make sure it's available as soon as it's allowed.

1 comments

> all they have to do is give it to a university library

Give what? Their permission? The source document (pre-print) that went to the journal? The PDF of the published article?

The poster [1] refers to "the published version", so yes, the PDF of the published article. But Dutch researchers who are interested can probably best just get in touch with their library, who I'm sure will be able to tell them exactly what they need.

[1] https://www.openaccess.nl/sites/www.openaccess.nl/files/docu...

> "the published version", so yes, the PDF of the published article

I'm genuinely interested in how this works in practice. Also how do authors obtain a PDF of their published work other than from the publisher?

Would be great to hear from Dutch researchers (particularly those publishing in Elsevier journals...) on how well this procedure is working.

Unfortunately I'm not a researcher, but hopefully someone who is will try/has tried it out and can report back :)